bhowes
Active VIP Member
good girl i will bring both of my 800 s so getting a good day on the seat of an xm wont be an issue see ya on sunday
good girl i will bring both of my 800 s so getting a good day on the seat of an xm wont be an issue see ya on sunday
163 is the only way ... especially when you get those really deep days we all love that little bit of extra makes a big difference...i have a 163 and i jump and drop probably more the the average guy.. my tunnel may have been injured a bit but nothing a little welding and a new bracket couldnt fix... but my rails are perfect .... if your worried about throwing it around dont be you wont even notice it
good girl i will bring both of my 800 s so getting a good day on the seat of an xm wont be an issue see ya on sunday
Hey Blair, don't forget to slip a little Doolaide in her coffee first thing when she isn't looking.....Loooooool.
while you are at it slip in some bailey's too
while you are at it slip in some bailey's too
What I find funny is I had this same debate, a while back, but with a 162 and a 174. I really need to ride a 174".
Math is cool but I can tell you that a 163 works 30% better lol at least
I don't care for the 174. That is a BoAT. Big turning radius, doesn't climb much better with stock motors and vertical button hooks take twice the radius. I wouldn't do it again unless I was building a turbo climbing only sled
Some quick math on this for reference (for the nerds amongst us...)
Actual snow contact of a track is about 40 to 45% of total track length so using 43% as a constant:
154x16x.43 = 7.33 sq. ft.
155x15x.43 = 6.94 '' ''
163x16x.43 = 7.77 sq. ft.
163x15x.43 = 7.30 '' "
Going from a 15 to a 16 (same length) gives an extra 6-7% contact area.
Going from a 154 to a 163 gives an extra 6% contact area (approx 4" in contact length and one extra row of lugs in the snow)
Going from 155x15 to a 163x16 gives a 12% increase in contact area.
Using 550 lbs wet for my 154 Summit X sled and about 200lbs for myself and gear gives 102lbs/sq. ft of contact area (750/7.33)
Contact area doesnt mean as much as the PSI pushing down on it. Having the equivalent contact area of a naval battleship doesn't help if you have a battleship weight pushing down on it. The difference in the 155" to 163" is 2 lbs on the track (55 lbs to 57 lbs). Polaris says the sleds are 7 lbs different on the 155 to 163, which is reasonable. Add 5 lbs for the boards, rails and tunnel and the 2 lbs for the track.
Sled A weighs 500 lbs with 155" - PSI is 72.0 lbs/square foot.
Sled B weighs 507 lbs with 163" - PSI is 69.4 lbs/square foot.
Overall your best bang for the buck is the 163", more contact area and less weight.......but - Something to consider Rowdy is that added track on the ground will be harder for your smaller frame to toss around, its not always about the floatation if you can't manouver it. I would definitely test drive them both before making any final decision. If having the added track means you are fighting it all day, you are going to be bagged and would have a better time on the 155". if you do go 163", setting up the transfer so that you can steer that much rubber with as little effort as possible will make it go much easier on ya. Make sure the sleds you test drive are set up the same on the transfer so you get an honest comparison between the two and ensure that you don't get skewed results.