Free: Contests & Raffles.
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
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?
Same concept, snow is snow.
Quote from: buglebuster on October 29, 2013, 09:56:37 PMSame concept, snow is snow.Disagree respectfully. The last thing I want is to be floating/skiing/sliding around on big wide tires. Get the pizza cutters dug in on solid ground and go.
If your in a lightweight rock crawler or toyota, yes a big fat tire aired down can get you to float - until the snow turns to mashed potatoes with sunshine.snow is not snow - there's so many different types of snow and snow conditions - all varied throught the day with temps and sunshine. The only consistant way to travel through snow is to chew down through it. If you have a big fat tire then your chains will have to work that much harder to move the snow out of the way to hit the dirt, then your surface area will be bigger and you'll get less bite. Over here with hood deep powder snow, which you can get over night your big fatty tires are going to try to float and ride up on the snow, your tires will hop and you'll have to back out of it or destroy your drive train.