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Rare dual-track Tucker 323 Sno-Cat Restored 1967 Tucker Model 342. The more common four track Tucker Sno-Cats are considered to be the classic Sno-Cats in American history and have been used extensively in both polar regions for exploration, as well as for transportation, trail grooming and industrial applications.
A Tucker Sno-Cat at the Rothera Research Station, Antarctica. Most snowcats, such as the ones produced by Bombardier or Aktiv in the past, have two sets of tracks, fitted with a Christie suspension or a Horstmann suspension. Others, like the Tucker Sno-Cat and Hägglunds Bandvagn 206 vehicles, have a complex arrangement of four or more tracks.
LMC 1500 LMC 1200. Logan Manufacturing Company was a US manufacturer of snowcats that ceased operation in 2000. LMC is both the tradename (brand name) and an acronym.. The company's earliest history started with a prototype tracked snow vehicle built in 1948 by engineers Roy France and Emmett Devine, of the Utah Scientific Foundation at Utah State University in Logan, Utah.
Tucker Sno-Cat, a family of tracked vehicles for snow conditions; Snow leopard, a large cat native to the mountain ranges of central Asia; Snow Cat (Transformers), a character from the Transformers: Energon cartoon series; Snow Cat, a book by Dayal Kaur Khalsa and an animated adaptation of the same name
A snow groomer (informally called a "piste basher" in the United Kingdom) [3] [4] is a tracked vehicle equipped in front with a shovel (or dozer blade) and behind with a cutter (or roller). [5]
Tucker Sno-Cat; Tupolev A-3 Aerosledge; V. Vermont Association of Snow Travelers; W. Wheel Horse This page was last edited on 23 January 2018, at 23:40 (UTC). Text is ...
The Snow Trac is a small personal Snowcat that is roughly the size of a modern compact car. Aktiv Snow Trac were manufactured in Sweden between 1957 and 1981, with additional vehicles manufactured in Scotland.
Notable competitors included the Aktiv Snow Trac ST4 from Sweden, Thiokol, and Tucker Sno-Cat from the USA. The Snow Trac was produced, virtually unchanged, until 1981, but it was successful, with over 2,000 units sold, and it was used all over the globe for exploration and commercial purposes, as well as the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan.