indianjohn
Want to trade a Mahindra 3510 4WD tractor for a harley Im tired of mowing grass,Hurry before the old man gets home or gets his laptop working
What you are here just once a week??
I have dumb questions every day here-Have you seen some of the Brilliant ones I try to answer ?? Im trying to remember what yours was Prob looking for Harley lipstick or something
But im so stupid why did you connect to me??
Answer
Jake, Just mow the lawn for your fathert. Be a good son. (HeeHee)
Jake, Just mow the lawn for your fathert. Be a good son. (HeeHee)
how to turn a stock Go kart into a dune buggy?
Jack
i have a stock Go kart 2 wheel drive and i wana give it shocks 4WD and bigger tires, dose anyone know how to do this or know where to get kits for this?
Answer
Not to be rude, but if you don't know how to do it, how would you expect to install it even after someone told you?
This isn't a typical "do it yourself" type project. Doing this would require fairly significant mechanical apptitude.
Depending on the size of the Go-Kart, you have to make sure the frame could even withstand increasing the tire size, the engine size, etc. Beyond physically making it work, you also need to make sure it is able to run very well.
(Example: My dad tried this when I was a kid and he just blindly tossed some massive rear tires and a snow-mobile engine on a tiny go-kart frame. Sure it ran, and it was pretty fast, but it was horrible driving it. With such a light weight frame, and rear heavy with big tires, every tiny bump and you almost popped wheelies. Also due to the size of the rear tires you couldn't turn very well due to the back tires binding up. So between popping wheelies all the time, and crappy turning, what seemed like a great idea turned to an expensive waste of time quickly. Also, the rear tires weren't obviously large to anyone looking at it, but beacuse of design flaw they didn't work. Picture a Lawn Tractor, front tires are smaller than the rear right? That was about the size difference between ours)
So, you can certainly try to do it, but if you don't know what you are doing, it will most likely end up like my dad's experiement and just be a big waste of money. (However, he did take his failure and redesign the kart and it worked very well afterwards, but wasn't after learning where he messed up.)
Not to be rude, but if you don't know how to do it, how would you expect to install it even after someone told you?
This isn't a typical "do it yourself" type project. Doing this would require fairly significant mechanical apptitude.
Depending on the size of the Go-Kart, you have to make sure the frame could even withstand increasing the tire size, the engine size, etc. Beyond physically making it work, you also need to make sure it is able to run very well.
(Example: My dad tried this when I was a kid and he just blindly tossed some massive rear tires and a snow-mobile engine on a tiny go-kart frame. Sure it ran, and it was pretty fast, but it was horrible driving it. With such a light weight frame, and rear heavy with big tires, every tiny bump and you almost popped wheelies. Also due to the size of the rear tires you couldn't turn very well due to the back tires binding up. So between popping wheelies all the time, and crappy turning, what seemed like a great idea turned to an expensive waste of time quickly. Also, the rear tires weren't obviously large to anyone looking at it, but beacuse of design flaw they didn't work. Picture a Lawn Tractor, front tires are smaller than the rear right? That was about the size difference between ours)
So, you can certainly try to do it, but if you don't know what you are doing, it will most likely end up like my dad's experiement and just be a big waste of money. (However, he did take his failure and redesign the kart and it worked very well afterwards, but wasn't after learning where he messed up.)
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