Highbeam
Super Member
On the IH, I had to push out a roll pin from one side of the master link pin then rotate the track until the pin was at the rear of the sprocket. Then I used a floor jack to push up on the track at the rear most part of the sprocket, effectively unloading the tension from the master link pin. Then use a sledge hammer and a drift to knock the pin from the outside to the inside. I went ahead and drove the pin all the way out and since the track is on the sprocket it stays put hooked on the teeth.
That is the trickiest part. All this undercarriage is pretty heavy and the tracks are not something to lift by hand. It takes some thought and some leverage to do most anything down there safely. The hardest part of the whole thing for me was positioning the rollers up inside the track frame so that the retaining bolts could be installed.
A good pressure washing before I started was very necessary.
That is the trickiest part. All this undercarriage is pretty heavy and the tracks are not something to lift by hand. It takes some thought and some leverage to do most anything down there safely. The hardest part of the whole thing for me was positioning the rollers up inside the track frame so that the retaining bolts could be installed.
A good pressure washing before I started was very necessary.