Ouch! Do you use reverse to slow yourself down coming down steep inclines?
Do people acctually do that...lol
Do people acctually do that...lol
I didnt - but one of the torx head bolts is mia!Ouch! Do you use reverse to slow yourself down coming down steep inclines?
I seen it in person!
Thats retarded...lol
Do people acctually do that...lol
Thats retarded...lol
X2 I have used this method a few times going down a waterfall and itb was this or a big issue at the bottom. Why would this be any harder on the belt that spinning that track forward? Juat askingI have done this countless times when in areas that were too steep to negotiate around trees, I really thought of it as the difference between destroying a 15k sled vs a $200 belt.
If the secondary is held by the brake so it isnt turning and you get on the throttle as you let the brake off, where would the issue be. ( other than the belt ) it really shouldnt be much harder than aggressivly reversing in any other situation should it?
take it easy on me im not a mechanic or an engineer.
X2 I have used this method a few times going down a waterfall and itb was this or a big issue at the bottom. Why would this be any harder on the belt that spinning that track forward? Juat asking
this is correct. in reverse it loads the usually slack side of the chain where the tensioner is. saw one blown apart at the dealer, the metal around where the adjuster bolt threads in was ripped back and away from the case. dude said he didn't know how it happened, but looked pretty obvious to me. chain and gears were fine....typically its not any harder on the belt when done properly, what people neglect to take into consideration is slack in the chain case then end up with an exploded chain case. Regular maintenace helps reduce any chance of issues as a result form using the reverse.
Had really good weekend - alot of snow - Road the 13's - then got sled home to clean up for next ride - Bolt sheered off in secondary that holds rollers and went through both clutches !