Oneguy,
Care to tell us about how your tracked quad is vs a snowmobile. I own a fourwheeler, and I only use it for plowing the driveway. I have wondered if tracks are good idea or a gimmick. I'd love a skidoo tundra but there isn't really enough riding time available due to conditions to justify a sled to sit around for 9/10 months a year.
Sobie2
Hate to get off track with OP's post but you asked? I'm probably not qualified to answer because I've never owned a sled. With that said I was looking at sleds when I decided on tracks as I already had a quad. In my sled research folks told me that sleds will overheat if you go to slow for longer periods? I use the tracks for my camera trapping, some winter prospecting, and skidding firewood. I like to be able to go slow and look at animal track and also pack all my crap. Also didn't want to tow a sled with crap so I can get into tight timbered brushy areas without a sled behind me? So that's why the tracks...FOR ME.
They are spendy and last time I checked many years ago they wanted like $4g's (I paid under $3g's). They are built to the size of your engine with appropriate reduction gear. They are slow, can be hard to steer in wet snow or deep powder but fine on packed trails. They struggle in deep light powder but I've NEVER been stuck and you can always back out of any high center. You also can't get any momentum for hill climbing but in the right kind of snow I've gone straight up cut bank slopes where the sleds have been high marking and gone further than the sleds. So it really depends on what you want to do out there? If you want/need to travel lots of miles asap then get a sled? Where I live the country is between steep and steeper (a lot like Juneau area) so access is lousy anyways so a guy pretty much stays on the existing road systems anyways so the tracks will get you there....but slowly. Had them 6-7 years now and not one single problem? Oh yeah...better shovel them out also if you plan to ride the next day....lol Sorry for the hijack....