Posted January 20, 20214 yr Skis instead of the front wheels, tracked bogies instead of the rear wheels and removing the differential -> some fun in the deep snow. To be honest, I regret not having any motorized 42069 version at hand.
January 20, 20214 yr Author Because I geared it down and used sprockets that are much smaller than 42124's original wheels. I expected that a lot of torque would be required, and with fresh, deep snow this appears to be true. On an older, hard packed snow you could probably drive the regular 42124 at normal speed, but then it wouldn't be much different from driving on solid ground.
January 20, 20214 yr When I made a snowmobile, I found it helped to add small fins (i.e. 30413) to the bottom of the skis to improve steering authority. I also added camber, like on a real snowmobile, but I'm not sure how much of an effect it had on the steering. Edited January 20, 20214 yr by Horologist
January 21, 20214 yr 14 hours ago, Sariel said: I expected that a lot of torque would be required, and with fresh, deep snow this appears to be true. Then why not to use buggy motor with buwizz? ;)
January 21, 20214 yr Author 11 hours ago, Bartybum said: Wouldn’t the original tyres work well on snow because of the tread? Probably not on a snow this deep and soft. 3 hours ago, Jurss said: Then why not to use buggy motor with buwizz? ;) I don't think one buggy motor would perform that differently from two C+ L motors, plus I would need to rework most of the buggy to fit that motor in there somehow. As you can see below, L motors are a pretty good option for driving on snow: Edited January 21, 20214 yr by Sariel
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