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M1 Abrams Bogeys (Major G, this one's for you!)

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  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, June 13, 2003 9:14 AM
You make me miss my M1... thank God I have a Paladin to work on!

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Thursday, June 12, 2003 7:32 AM
First of all, they are not called bogies, they are just called road wheels. They basically go on the road wheel arm like changing a tire on your car. If you look at the center of the kit road wheel, you will see a ring of bolts. The center of the hub remains on the road wheel arm, the road wheels themselves are just the wheel.

A device called a "dog bone" (looks similar to a giant metal bone) is attached to the inside of the road wheel arm and the other side fits into the inside end connector of the track. When the tank rolls forward a few feet, the dog bone is rotated to a vertical position and lifts the road wheel arm up over the track a few inches. The dog bone is bascially a jack to give the road wheels clearance so you can remove them.

The lug nuts are removed and the road wheel is free to come off. The inner and outer road wheels are not connected. They just mount onto the same bolts. The "axle" portion that the two road wheels mount on is called the spindle. When both road wheels are removed, the shiny metal spindle is visable along with the series of threaded bolts that ring the hub. Road wheels are identical, one is just reversed when put on. Changing a road wheel takes about 15 minutes and is as simple as changing a tire (with a lot of lug nuts).
  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Aaaaah.... Alpha Apaches... A beautiful thing!
M1 Abrams Bogeys (Major G, this one's for you!)
Posted by Cobrahistorian on Thursday, June 12, 2003 1:19 AM
Major G,

Quick question for ya. Would you happen to have any photos of an Abrams bogey disassembled? The reason I ask is I'm modeling M1A1 #059/ A14 from TF4/64 in a cantonment area in Baghdad under the crossed sabers monument. A14 stopped to change a bogey. I've got a great shot of it with the rear right armor skirt open and the new bogey resting against the front of the right track. I'm hoping to replicate it in a diorama, but have no clue how to model the bogey being changed.

Thanks!
"1-6 is in hot"
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