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Zip ties, Bailing wire, or some kind of small clevis also work well for securing the loose end. Also make sure that the chain tail is moving in the correct direction. As the tire rolls forward you want the chain tail to be in the opposite direction of the rotation. I personally put the chains on drive 100 ft then tighten. the D cam locks wrk great because they reduce eliminate that step. correct tension on link chains is EVERYTHING! too tight extra wear and possible damage to the tires, too loose they will spin and/or wipe stuff out.
I have a question. I have a set of chains for my old truck I never used, my new truck has a little bigger tires on it and the chains dont quite fit. Can I add links to them to make them fit?
you want tall narrow "pizza cutter" tires anyways
Quote from: buglebuster on October 29, 2013, 04:30:57 PMI have a question. I have a set of chains for my old truck I never used, my new truck has a little bigger tires on it and the chains dont quite fit. Can I add links to them to make them fit?Yes, if you have the correct link/chains to add.I have an old set I dismantled to have spare links, in case some break.There is a tool out there specifically designed to work on tire chains but I cant find it any place and have not seen them in years
Quote from: KFhunter on October 29, 2013, 07:29:44 PMyou want tall narrow "pizza cutter" tires anywaysNot in snow!
Quote from: buglebuster on October 29, 2013, 08:34:56 PMQuote from: KFhunter on October 29, 2013, 07:29:44 PMyou want tall narrow "pizza cutter" tires anywaysNot in snow!huh?enlighten me please, I gotta hear this.