is that with the stock plate removed?3/16ths here Bgreen. I've got just enough thread to put a washer & shallow castle nut on the bottom.
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is that with the stock plate removed?3/16ths here Bgreen. I've got just enough thread to put a washer & shallow castle nut on the bottom.
not at all my friend....the guy who welded mine made it to thick. not sure what he did, was so mad that i had to just leave. needless to say, its bluebird, theres 4 feet of fresh snow. and i am on snowest with no sled to ride. FML!!!
is that with the stock plate removed?
Anyone that rides hard, or is big, or does alot of whooped out trails, or jumps alot, should be looking at this area of their sled after every ride. I don't jump at all (anymore), but I do pound alot of nasty trails to get into the mountains, and I'm somewhat large. Mine cracked out at about 1500 miles. While your in there looking around, take a look at your spark plug wires if you have an M1000, the vibration can cause accelerated chafing. At $170 each, it pays to keep an eye on them.
excuse me what costs 170 surely not 4 plug wires
Forgot to update, but since last ride of the season a bit ago, the weld I had on my plate cracked all the way through in a perfect horizontal line, right through the center of the weld itself. All I have holding it now is the rivets in back. Im not sure whether to have it rewelded or come up with another solution. Anyone else had to repair thiers twice?
If people aren't doing anything to increase the strength above and beyond the OEM design, its just a matter of time until their repairs fail. Welding the crack up is not a good repair; when you weld aluminum it almost always looses strength. To answer your question, yes, I had a customer bring me his sled because his first repair failed.
Anyone else had to repair thiers twice?