The only way I ever got tracks back on when they came off, was to break them and rejoin them when back in place. If you can get a new master pin, hollow/gouge out the ends of the old master pin, it will then dive out with a small hammer, I always kept a couple of new master pins in the deep freze for those occasions that I had to break a track for repairs. Good luck with the task, I hope the tractor is not in a horrible position on the side of a hill etc. Neil
The only way I ever got tracks back on when they came off, was to break them and rejoin them when back in place. If you can get a new master pin, hollow/gouge out the ends of the old master pin, it will then dive out with a small hammer, I always kept a couple of new master pins in the deep freze for those occasions that I had to break a track for repairs. Good luck with the task, I hope the tractor is not in a horrible position on the side of a hill etc. Neil
If the track has not come completely off the sprocket, do not fight it. Simply reverse the direction in which it came off.
I read a story of a cat in Alaska that had thrown a track and the owner abandoned the cat. When some else approached the owner about wanting his tractor, the owner simply said, it threw a track and can't be moved, so if you can get it moving again without dismantling it you can have it! So the guy who wanted the tractor found the track had started to come off the sprocket. So he started the tractor, reversed the direction in which the track came off, and drove the tractor out of the woods. Apparently impressing the original owner. Who by the way gave it away!
Tractorboy1
TractorBoy is correct(He got lucky),
If the track is on the bottom half of the sprockect, put the tractor in reverse and it should climb it back on the top of the sprocket.-glen