Mill666er
Active member
Purchased this Sno-Cat the week after the WA Snowcat jamboree. I have been looking around for a project and hoped to find a more vintage Tucker but then I stumbled across this forum and had to have something NOW. Of course there was no snow on the ground and I thought I could get started on the restoration and track maintenance. That thought only lasted a couple weeks because we now have snow.
This tucker was originally sold to a ski area in Aspen then sold to the ski area at Snoqualmie to haul freight to the lodge. The Workers didn't like to use it because the bed sat so high off of the ground so it got parked. During a big snowfall year it got buried and someone parked one of the other snow cats on top of the cab and crushed it. The ski area unloaded it about 5 years ago to the guy I bought it from. The previous owner fabricated a steel plate rooftop to make it functional. The bed has a wrap around 4"x6"x.25" wall rectangular tube 'weight' which will eventually get cut off to lighten the Cat's 8000lb figure. Radiator and water pump have been replace and At some point the Allison AT540 got replaced with a reman AT545 four speed automatic which I guess is for the better.
Here is the biggest reason why I bought this Tucker, the Detroit 453T

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Fabricated roof
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Only two of the tracks have ice breakers and they are in the wrong location
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The floor had a little rust problem that I repaired to get me through the winter. Pulled the beat up 1/4" aluminum diamond plate that was protecting my shop floor in front of my welding table to make the new floor boards. Made all of the cuts on the table saw with a carbide non-ferrous metal blade and broke the angle in the press.
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Other things I have done, rebuild the brake master cylinder, pulled all six of the bogie wheels from the passenger side rear track to inspect/replace/ repack all wheel bearings with marine grease and replace all 12 seals. I didn't think to call Tucker about the seal shields until after getting ready to re-assemble them. They are still available and run about $2.20 per set per wheel. Will probably repeat the same service on the other rear track this weekend unless there is more snow in the forecast. Bearings, cups, and seals from Rock Auto

Previous owner bought enough belting for all four tracks but only got them replaced on the front two. It will be a PITA to replace because someone welded all of the bolt heads to the grousers going through the two center belts before welding stiffeners covering those bolts. The bolts in the outer belts were not kept tight and have rattled half way through the grouser. I have ordered grade 8 flange bolts and lock nuts which will increase the contact surface and prolong their life. 54lbs of nuts and bolts from ASMC industrial with free delivery thanks to USPS tax payer subsidized shipping, if it fits it ships.

I also made a jig to punch the holes in the belts greatly reducing the time compared to laying them out individually. Thanks to the tucker track info post, I have 32 grousers with a 5.875" pitch for a 188" belt length. My jig has dowel pins for the pitch, the 3" width, and a fence to keep one hole .625" from the edge on the 4.5" belts. The first belt took about an hour as I was constantly checking the pitch and location. The forth belt was down to 25 minutes to punch the 64 holes.



I have received my Tucker build sheet but can't figure out how to attach it using my iPad and Tapatalk. I will need to dust off the MacBook to get it into this post.
Thanks to all the great posts and information, I have some idea of what I should be doing.
Rob Miller
Winthrop, WA
This tucker was originally sold to a ski area in Aspen then sold to the ski area at Snoqualmie to haul freight to the lodge. The Workers didn't like to use it because the bed sat so high off of the ground so it got parked. During a big snowfall year it got buried and someone parked one of the other snow cats on top of the cab and crushed it. The ski area unloaded it about 5 years ago to the guy I bought it from. The previous owner fabricated a steel plate rooftop to make it functional. The bed has a wrap around 4"x6"x.25" wall rectangular tube 'weight' which will eventually get cut off to lighten the Cat's 8000lb figure. Radiator and water pump have been replace and At some point the Allison AT540 got replaced with a reman AT545 four speed automatic which I guess is for the better.
Here is the biggest reason why I bought this Tucker, the Detroit 453T

View attachment 71300
View attachment 71301
View attachment 71302
Fabricated roof
View attachment 71289
Only two of the tracks have ice breakers and they are in the wrong location
View attachment 71290
View attachment 71291
View attachment 71292
View attachment 71293
The floor had a little rust problem that I repaired to get me through the winter. Pulled the beat up 1/4" aluminum diamond plate that was protecting my shop floor in front of my welding table to make the new floor boards. Made all of the cuts on the table saw with a carbide non-ferrous metal blade and broke the angle in the press.
View attachment 71294
View attachment 71295

View attachment 71296
Other things I have done, rebuild the brake master cylinder, pulled all six of the bogie wheels from the passenger side rear track to inspect/replace/ repack all wheel bearings with marine grease and replace all 12 seals. I didn't think to call Tucker about the seal shields until after getting ready to re-assemble them. They are still available and run about $2.20 per set per wheel. Will probably repeat the same service on the other rear track this weekend unless there is more snow in the forecast. Bearings, cups, and seals from Rock Auto

Previous owner bought enough belting for all four tracks but only got them replaced on the front two. It will be a PITA to replace because someone welded all of the bolt heads to the grousers going through the two center belts before welding stiffeners covering those bolts. The bolts in the outer belts were not kept tight and have rattled half way through the grouser. I have ordered grade 8 flange bolts and lock nuts which will increase the contact surface and prolong their life. 54lbs of nuts and bolts from ASMC industrial with free delivery thanks to USPS tax payer subsidized shipping, if it fits it ships.

I also made a jig to punch the holes in the belts greatly reducing the time compared to laying them out individually. Thanks to the tucker track info post, I have 32 grousers with a 5.875" pitch for a 188" belt length. My jig has dowel pins for the pitch, the 3" width, and a fence to keep one hole .625" from the edge on the 4.5" belts. The first belt took about an hour as I was constantly checking the pitch and location. The forth belt was down to 25 minutes to punch the 64 holes.



I have received my Tucker build sheet but can't figure out how to attach it using my iPad and Tapatalk. I will need to dust off the MacBook to get it into this post.
Thanks to all the great posts and information, I have some idea of what I should be doing.
Rob Miller
Winthrop, WA













