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Curious what 15" and t-motion delete would be like
On the Gen4.
Bet it would be even better!
Had friend and previous cat rider do this , he has gone back to stock, I told him it was a waste, guys over ride the machine, t-motion moves 2degrees either way, you move 10 to 20 degrees, personally it's a waste of money and time.
I've never felt no t-motion so maybe I don't belong here. I find it crazy 2 degrees which is 1/180th of a full rotation, makes that much of a difference other than the initial efforts.
So y'all are saying flex edge and t-motion works fine as long as you get rid of t-motion?
How long is the arm from the pivot point down to the rails?
I guessed it was about 8 inches.
At 8 inches from the pivot point 2 degrees of arc with equal 0.279" of travel from the center point. For a total stop to stop travel of 0.558".
That sure doesn't seem like much to me but my father always said it's rare you're the smartest man in the room. So somebody else may have a better way to look at it.
So let's look at this going the opposite direction up to your chest. Again with some assumptions I figured an average height person would be roughly 60 inches from the pivot point to the center of their chest.
That would be 2.094" of travel from the center to the stop. For a total stop to stop travel of 4.188".
So theoretically your chest is a tinge over 2 inches to the left or right of the centerline of the snowmobile when your legs and body is still perpendicular to the center of the seat. ( assuming you're standing directly over the center of the seat to start with)
That is seemingly more significant to me.
What does all this mean? Beats the hell out of me Roy.
How long is the arm from the pivot point down to the rails?
I guessed it was about 8 inches.
At 8 inches from the pivot point 2 degrees of arc with equal 0.279" of travel from the center point. For a total stop to stop travel of 0.558".
That sure doesn't seem like much to me but my father always said it's rare you're the smartest man in the room. So somebody else may have a better way to look at it.
So let's look at this going the opposite direction up to your chest. Again with some assumptions I figured an average height person would be roughly 60 inches from the pivot point to the center of their chest.
That would be 2.094" of travel from the center to the stop. For a total stop to stop travel of 4.188".
So theoretically your chest is a tinge over 2 inches to the left or right of the centerline of the snowmobile when your legs and body is still perpendicular to the center of the seat. ( assuming you're standing directly over the center of the seat to start with)
That is seemingly more significant to me.
What does all this mean? Beats the hell out of me Roy.