To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

snowmobiles and flooring

GMBracing

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 10, 2012
Messages
54
As I finish the snowmobile area in the basement,I am having a hard time trying to figure out what flooring to use. The skis and picks are hard on the floor, (this is a ride in garage area). and the sleds bring in a lot of snow with them. this means lots of water. Floor area is flat not sloped to door
Any suggestions?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

jhelrey

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
7,250
Location
MN
I am a huge snowmobiler. Nothing will stand up to the carbides or studs.
 

benchracer

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2011
Messages
90
Location
Chicagoland
Maybe lay down sheets of plywood and replace them as they get ripped up?
I'm going to have the same issue once my garage and driveway are done.
 

RaceDeck1

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2007
Messages
3,001
Location
Salt Lake City , Utah
The carbide runners are brutal on any surface. one option would be, If you are pulling straight in all winter, you can replace the few tiles scratched at the end of the season
 

slickgt1

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 11, 2010
Messages
1,674
Would it abuse some ultra hard porcelain tile? You might want to give it a test. Get one and run over it. Just make sure you have it on some flat surface, or it will crack as it is not set. I am hard on my tiles, but I also don't have a snowmobile, so I don't know if it is any more abusive to the tiles. And if it does get messed up, fixing it is as easy as waiting for new thinset to dry.
 

trainer

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2005
Messages
2,019
Location
Northern Ontario, Canada
Get a cover and a lock and leave the sled outside.
heated storage= fuel tank condensation= iced up carbs

A vehicle full of fuel is not a good idea in the basement from a safety standpoint.

Consider using plain steel runners and lose the studs. I ran that setup for many years and tens of thousands of miles.

That said, maybe something like Rhino-liner would work
 
Last edited:

c7fx

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 24, 2008
Messages
175
Location
ohio
Having a floor that doesn't drain doesn't sound good for starters.
If you could get it to drain I think vented tile like Racedeck or swisstrax would work good with ski guides attached to prevent the tiles from being torn up.

Other option is to roll them in with a dolly many options available.
 

Garage Flooring

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
May 21, 2011
Messages
5,288
Location
Grand Junction, CO
As I finish the snowmobile area in the basement,I am having a hard time trying to figure out what flooring to use. The skis and picks are hard on the floor, (this is a ride in garage area). and the sleds bring in a lot of snow with them. this means lots of water. Floor area is flat not sloped to door
Any suggestions?

Have a look at our premium rib tile or the Ribtrax tile. As everyone has said the snowmobile will leave scuffs on anything. We did have one customer use strips of AC plywood. That in of itself was not that interesting. But he put small rubber stoppers on the underside and it fit down into the groves of the Ribtile and kept it from moving:dunno: but it worked for him
 

trbomax

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
2,556
Location
starvation lake,mi.
Mine have had thier own drive in/drive out garage and shop for 10 yrs now. Its heated and the floor is 3/4 treated plywood. In 10 yrs its still not worn thru the top ply, even on the approach to the lift.never had a frozen carb either in over 39 yrs of rideing,even when we trailered the rig was parked in a heated shop all week. Dont take this wrong,but if you know how to ride you wont have to spin the track on the shop floor.

edit) and I can back the above up with a pic if needed.
 

trbomax

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
2,556
Location
starvation lake,mi.
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

trbomax

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
2,556
Location
starvation lake,mi.
I tried indoor/outdoor over my door sills and a couple feet out onto the concrete approach.I drilled holes and pinned it down with landscape spikes.It was fine for the ski carbides but the studs would penetrate it and try to pick it up. I guess if you didnt run track studs it could be an option.
 

Sureshot

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Messages
3,134
Location
Bridge Creek, OK
Has anyone ever tried to build a dolly in one piece?
My idea was to build it like a T where the track just started to engage the dolly as the ski's hit it so it could not shoot out. The track would pull it under the skis at which point the track would be off the floor and the whole thing on dollys. Just drive forward and the track power pushes the machine forward and off the dolly. Maybe a piece of old track on the middle section for some positive engagement.
The track section would be a flatten triangle, dolly outside the track width, and just long enough to engage and disengage at the right times. The ski section may only have a dolly on the inside of the ski. Join the two sections with a piece of square tubing lengthwise and a piece of square tubing joining the sides under the track. I may have to get the sled out and try this.
I have had this on my mind to do for a few years but never tried it. Maybe this year or someone else can experiment and post.
 
OP
G

GMBracing

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 10, 2012
Messages
54
thought about a couple of horse stall mats in the "landing zone", then I have dollys from harbor freight. Use 3 of them.,
2 with 2x3 screed on for the skis and 1 under the track. ,
 

trbomax

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
2,556
Location
starvation lake,mi.
Has anyone ever tried to build a dolly in one piece?
My idea was to build it like a T where the track just started to engage the dolly as the ski's hit it so it could not shoot out. The track would pull it under the skis at which point the track would be off the floor and the whole thing on dollys. Just drive forward and the track power pushes the machine forward and off the dolly. Maybe a piece of old track on the middle section for some positive engagement.
The track section would be a flatten triangle, dolly outside the track width, and just long enough to engage and disengage at the right times. The ski section may only have a dolly on the inside of the ski. Join the two sections with a piece of square tubing lengthwise and a piece of square tubing joining the sides under the track. I may have to get the sled out and try this.
I have had this on my mind to do for a few years but never tried it. Maybe this year or someone else can experiment and post.


I built 5 or 6 like that back in the 90's. I used 6" wheel and under slung the mounts to keep the dolly low. Used caster wheels in back and rigid in front.I only used them for off season storage because it allowed me to pack them in tightlyto take less space(I was running 6 sleds back then because of the kids).They were OK but they took up too much space to store during the winter when I was useing the sleds so I made engine dollys out of them.
 

ctd

Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
16
Location
Mountains of BC
Are you familiar with Super Glides? I'm not sure how they would stand up to picks, certainly works well for carbides.

http://www.superclamp.net/

I'm thinking if you attached these to treated plywood or that plastic wood that is used on Sled decks & lay it on your floor.

You still have to deal with the water somehow.
 

Lkdelta

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 21, 2010
Messages
1,131
Location
40 mi.east of syracuse
Has anyone ever tried to build a dolly in one piece?
My idea was to build it like a T where the track just started to engage the dolly as the ski's hit it so it could not shoot out. The track would pull it under the skis at which point the track would be off the floor and the whole thing on dollys. Just drive forward and the track power pushes the machine forward and off the dolly. Maybe a piece of old track on the middle section for some positive engagement.

I had something that sounds like this. It was on casters.
I would load the sled on. Then when I went to drive off it, the clutch would engage and "spit" the cart out the back with some force

I was thinking maybe recreate a snowmobile trailer deck "on the floor" for easy in and out with some durability. The plastic ski guides and something for the track to work with that won't be destroyed.
 

rev177

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 29, 2012
Messages
118
Location
Lino Lakes MN

Attachments

  • 178398_10151504556610299_1535541235_o.jpg
    178398_10151504556610299_1535541235_o.jpg
    143.6 KB · Views: 57
  • 523601_10151503467705299_2082189431_n.jpg
    523601_10151503467705299_2082189431_n.jpg
    87.1 KB · Views: 73
  • 52742_10151502238995299_802103142_o.jpg
    52742_10151502238995299_802103142_o.jpg
    140 KB · Views: 75
  • 384243_10151458923125299_2036945581_n.jpg
    384243_10151458923125299_2036945581_n.jpg
    53.8 KB · Views: 65

Blk88GT

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 16, 2009
Messages
1,075
Location
Manitoba
I'm told that using a good surface hardener will help eliminate carbide marks, but I doubt they'd do much for picks.

I had 20 bags of Diamag 7 power troweled into my concrete surface. I have yet to put a carbide on it, but I am fairly confident it will leave a mark in the sealer I used anyways.

So far I like the idea of the horse stall mats, but I'd screw some Superglides to it.
 

Sureshot

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Messages
3,134
Location
Bridge Creek, OK
My floor has hardener and the carbides leave a little mark you can see here and there but not too bad. Never had pics on it though.
 

burleyfarm

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 19, 2009
Messages
401
Location
Northern Michigan
Here's what I use for moving miine in and out of the garage.
You can purchase the optional large wheels for gravel or rough surfaces. Once in the garage I use the small caster dollies under each ski and the track to move them around.
I'm only 5'6" and 140 pounds and have no problem moving my machines by myself.

www.eazymovecarts.com/ezmove/index.html
 

Kirkvkid

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2011
Messages
69
Location
Syracuse, NY
I'm not really a snowmobiler but perhaps you could bring in some stone, dirt, or sand to put over the area the sled travels and sits. Toss some heavy plastic down, then add 4-5 inches thick so you dont wear through it. Kinda of like they do in an indoor arena when they a monster truck rally. Might be messy, but its cheap, easy to work, and easy to get rid of.
 

kluckfab

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 27, 2012
Messages
151
Dolly is the best way and then use a stand for the track and some old plywood for the skis.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom