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Caterpillar tracks were first implemented by Benjamin Holt , president of the Holt Manufacturing Company, on 24 November 1904. Following a merger and name change, The Holt Manufacturing Company went on to become the Caterpillar Tractor Company in 1925. Caterpillar tracks have since revolutionized construction vehicles and land warfare. The tracks system have been developed and improved during the years. The Israeli Defence Forces have developed an integrated system of tracks, wheels and springs, called Mazkum מזכו"ם (or זחלים for short), which enables greater mobility than regular tracks. The Mazkum is installed on the Israeli Merkava tank and gives it mobility and speed. Some of the Israeli patents were sold to Caterpillar Tractor Company.
Perhaps the oldest concept of tracks is to be found in theories of pre-historic erection of large stone monuments, when megaliths may have been slid along atop rounded wooden cylinders. While most of the workers pushed or pulled the rock along the timber track, a task of a smaller group was to take each wooden log that the rock had already passed over and put it in front. This would have been a more efficient method to transport heavy rocks great distances than simply pulling it along the ground, though attempts by experimental archaeologists to reconstruct these methods have met with variable success.
Modern tracks are built from modular chainlinks which compose together a closed chain. These chainlinks are often broad and made of strong metal. Between every two pieces of the chain there is a joint enabling the chains to change the angle between them. This allows the track to be flexible and maintain its elliptical shape.
The vehicle weight is suspended from a number of wheels known as bogies or road wheels. These wheels are typically mounted on some form of suspension to even out the ride over round ground. Suspension design is a major area of research; early designs offered only a few inches of travel using springs, whereas modern hydropneumatic systems allow several feet of travel and include shock absorbers.
Chinese T-62The T-62 Soviet main battle tank is a further development of the T-54/55 series. Production History The T-62 was produced between 1961 and 1975. It became a standard tank in the Soviet arsenal replacing the T-55 and T-54. It was later replaced by the T-64 tank with "Christie" tracks. The driving-wheel is in the back.thumb Warrior IFV with "Vickers" tracks.
Tracks are moved by a driving wheelOn a steam locomotive, a driving wheel is a powered wheel which is driven by the locomotive's pistons (or turbine, in the case of a steam turbine locomotive). On a conventional, non-articulated locomotive, the driving wheels are all coupled together with connected to the motor. The driving-wheel has spikes upon its perimeter which catch the track and drag it while it rotates. The driving-wheel is typically mounted well above the contact area on the ground, allowing it to be fixed in position. Although it is possible, placing a suspension on the driving wheel tends to be difficult mechanically. A non-powered wheel, the idler, is placed at the same "height" above the ground at the opposite end of the track, primarily to angle the front (or rear) of the track to allow it to climb over obstacles.
The "top" of the track is not as much of a concern as the bottom, although it does have to be held so it doesn't fall off to the side of the wheels. On tanks two systems have developed. One, mistakenly referred to as the Christie suspensionThe Christie suspension is a suspension system developed by Walter Christie for his tank designs. It allowed considerably longer movement than conventional leaf spring systems then in common use, which allowed his tanks to have considerably greater cross-, uses oversized road wheels and the track simply lies on top of the wheels. The shape of the track as a whole is somewhat bananaFor other meanings, see banana (disambiguation) A banana is a tree-like plant (though strictly a herb) of the genus Musa in the family Musaceae, closely related to plantain. The term banana is also applied to the elongated fruit (technically a false berry-like as the track droops onto the wheels after running over the driving wheel and idler. The other system, nameless, uses smaller return rollers to hold the track straight from the idler to the driving wheel, leading to a sideways D shape.
The advantages of tracks result in increased mobility through rough terrain. First, tracks are much more resistant to shrapnelShrapnel in the strict sense, is shot deliberately included in a landmine or shell intended to be scattered by the explosion. The pellets in the Claymore mine used by the United States meet this definition. More loosely, the term is used to refer to any f (nails, broken glass etc) and sharp fluctuations in the ground (holes, small pitPit can refer to the following things: Any high walled depression in the ground. Examples include a quarry or (in Britain) a coal mine. The seed in the center of a certain fruits is called a pit . Fruits containing pits include the cherry, peach, prune, os and ditchA ditch with water can be used for drainage and irrigation. With or without water it can be used as a barrier, as an alternative for a fence. A trench is a long narrow ditch. Types and applications include: Military i. for trench warfare Geological oceanies) than wheels, thus enabling the vehicle to drive over small obstacles that would stop a wheeled vehicle. Secondly, tracks distribute the weight of the vehicle over a larger area, thus decreasing its ground pressure. When working on sandy or muddy ground, this can prevent the vehicle from sinking. Bulldozers, which are most often tracked, uses this attribute to rescue other vehicles (such as wheel loaders which have become stuck in or sunk into the ground.
The disadvantages of tracks are decreased speed and the damage that they cause to what passes beneath them - rocks, shrubbery and asphalt roads. In addition, prolonged use places enormous strain on the drive transmission and the mechanics of the tracks, which must then be overhauled or replaced on a regular basis. It is common to see tracked vehicles such as bulldozers or tanks transported long distances by a wheeled carrier such as a semi-trailer or train, though technological advances have made this practice less common among tracked military vehicles than it once was.