ZRrrr
Active VIP Member
The age old question with far too many parameters to answer as a generic response of "yes" or "no".
So often I hear the terms "track speed" and "efficiency" thrown around by people when they are comparing apples to oranges in most cases.
Efficiency - what efficiency? Temperature? belt slippage?
Are you actually measuring track speed in the same conditions, same parameters? Measuring track speed one day with a full tank of fuel in 3 feet of powder and hot clutches and another day with no fuel, the hood off and hardpack are night and day comparisons.
To truly compare what track speed does for your sled in a given situation, you need to take different sets of gears out to the hill with you and try it out. Some sleds with heavy weights and clean sheaves will grip a belt really well in powder and spin the track all day without heating up. That same sled might slip the belt like crazy on harder snow if it can't spin the track.
I have worked with the gearing on sleds for years. They are better now, but most mountain sleds still come stock with gearing too tall for its intended application. The original Summits and RMK's had flatlander gearing in them! The old 1994 583's would pull upwards of 90 mph on the forestry roads! Talk about slippage when they were hillclimbing.....
Drop a few teeth on the gears and give the motor the mechanical advantage, the belt will likely shift out farther in the clutches and keep the RPM's in the optimum power range with less slippage and less heat generation.
Slipping clutches are an exponential failure. As the clutch starts to slip, it generates heat in the sheaves and belt. The more heat it generates, the more it starts to slip.....the more it slips, the more heat it generates....and further down the spiral it goes.
Anyway, that's just my $0.02.:d
THANK YOU!!
However, my thanks come with a caveate that gearing down is not always the answer. Working with clutching and a few other simple changes may mean better performance out of stock or taller gearing. Lots of variables to consider and lots of trial and error.