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can someone steer me in the right direction?

ftb

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Dec 3, 2009
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35
Location
northeast
looking for this exact type of track system for this same model CAT. this picture was takin over seas. anyone know of any manufactueres that make this for this size machine? Thanks guys
 

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ftb

Active Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2009
Messages
35
Location
northeast
I guess i wasnt that clear. what i am looking for are not bolt/clip ons but the actual chain style track pads. thanks
 

RobVG

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Jun 20, 2009
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Location
Seattle WA
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17 excavators and a stewpot of other stuff
I guess i wasnt that clear. what i am looking for are not bolt/clip ons but the actual chain style track pads. thanks

You might want to rephrase that again. Except for mini's, I haven't seen any track pads that don't bolt on. Sure looks like four bolt holes in the picture.
 

ftb

Active Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2009
Messages
35
Location
northeast
if you look clearly at picture above there are no steel track gouchers that the pads are bolted to its all one unit (chain style track pad.
 

Hendrik

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Joined
Mar 5, 2009
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Location
Adelaide South Australia
if you look clearly at picture above there are no steel track gouchers that the pads are bolted to its all one unit (chain style track pad.
For one thing the picture is not very bright but I adjusted it and they are almost certainly bolt ons, like ATCO said.
It may be possible to replace the steel track pads with the rubber type but why would you want to?
 

stumpjumper83

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Jan 13, 2007
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1,979
Location
Port Allegany, pa
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Movin dirt
if your thinking that a hard rubber pad is going to save a driveway when you run over it with a 315, you need to re-think your thoughts. Fact of the matter is that alot of driveways are built to withstand occasional use by personal vehicles under 5 ton. With rubber pads, you might not scratch the surface, but sit and dig on it and you will have it all cracked up. Your better off to just leave the tripple steel grousers on it and put old tires or conveyor strips down when you wanna cross a driveway.

You have to remember, your 38,000 pounds not 3800.
 

Asphalt/Dirtman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
66
Location
Ohio
rubber tracks on a 30-38k excavator HA. Your excavator would destroy "rubber band" tracks.
Steel baby, STEEL.

Pads on steel are fine. But you do not want rubber style tracks.
 

Blacksmoke07

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Joined
Feb 14, 2011
Messages
89
Location
PA
Occupation
Heavy Equipment Operator
These are bolt on pads, and j/w why not the bolt on style?
 

RKO

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Joined
Jul 21, 2007
Messages
181
Location
NE.
I bought a set of bolt on rubber pads for a 200 size machine a few years ago.
They work OK as long as you don't try to turn the machine or if the machine skids on the pads. If that happens it just tears them up. After wrecking many of the pads I just gave up on them and use old tires. They are cheap and will stand up better.
 

Hendrik

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2009
Messages
1,232
Location
Adelaide South Australia
I bought a set of bolt on rubber pads for a 200 size machine a few years ago.
They work OK as long as you don't try to turn the machine or if the machine skids on the pads. If that happens it just tears them up. After wrecking many of the pads I just gave up on them and use old tires. They are cheap and will stand up better.
I guess if you are just traveling across sensitive areas (like bitumen or concrete), tires would be alright, or matting but if you have to work on sensitive surfaces then rubber pads would be the go.
 

diggerman57

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Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
57
Location
Massachusetts
Occupation
heavy equipment operator
If you go to cat's website you can find those tracks. I forget what they are called, but I believe that they bolt directly to the chain. In other words, they don't bolt through a steel pad to the chain, just directly to the chain. They claim to give you the best attributes of both steel's strength and rubber's soft treading.
 
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