Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The wide tracks of this 1991 Logan snowcat reduce the ground pressure and improve grip but render it vulnerable to bumps. A snowcat (a portmanteau of snow and caterpillar) is an enclosed-cab, truck-sized, fully tracked vehicle designed to travel over snow. Major manufacturers are PistenBully (Germany), Prinoth (Italy), and Tucker (United States).
Snowcat, a truck-sized tracked snow vehicle; 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
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. 1972 Snow Trac ST4 7 passenger cabin variant
A Sno-Cat at Rothera on Adelaide Island off Antarctica. The Tucker Sno-Cat is a family of tracked vehicles for snow conditions, manufactured in Medford, Oregon by the company of the same name.
Snowcat, a large vehicle with tracks, for grooming of snow or transport over it; Snowmobile, a small vehicle for individual transport (the primary meaning of the term in Alaska) Snowmaking equipment, primarily an outdoor snow cannon with fan and compressor; Fake snow machines, usually for indoors, often producing soap bubbles
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.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file
From the 1940s through the early 1970s, Bombardier built the most successful [citation needed] snowcat models ever produced by any snowcat manufacturer. [citation needed] The B12 seated 12 people, and the C18 seated 18. Both were similar in design with long tracks in the rear and skis used to steer the vehicle.