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On 3/4/2015 8:35 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 3/4/2015 8:17 AM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 3/4/15 8:14 AM, True North wrote: KC - show quoted text - "Ha, haven't shoveled in weeks... Just drive through it ![]() God made 4x4 and snow tires. It's so funny at work listening to everyone complain about driving in the snow when they won't even spring for pair of snow tires" Pair of snow tires??? Up here they recommend all four. We're supposed to get 4" to 8" of snow tonight. As long as I can "blast" my way out the driveway with my old SUV, I'm happy. If it is more than 8", though, I'll have to call the plow guy. Do you have part-time 4WD on that Toyota? If so, does it do the job in the snow? My truck has regular 6 ply truck tires on it. My wife's Mountaineer (or whatever it is) has all season tires. Her's is automatic, all wheel drive. My truck is conventional (selectable) 4 wheel drive with a limited slip rear differential, so it's really 2 and a half wheel drive. Neither of us have any problems going through fairly deep snow. Only problems is ice, especially where the driveway slopes up to the house. Snow tires offer no advantage on ice. The reason I plow our driveway is because it is long and oil delivery, propane delivery and other large trucks would have a difficult if not impossible job trying to make it from the road to the house or barn. I also have emergency vehicles in mind. It would be a bitch to have a fire or medical issue and the responding vehicles couldn't make it to the house. If I can expose a good amount of the driveway the high emissivity of the black asphalt absorbs enough radiation energy from the sun to warm and either melt or sublimate any ice that forms, even when ambient temps are well below freezing. I also learned something this year that I never thought about before. The JD tractor has the typical big, cleated type rear tires. You would think that those big cleats on the tires would provide great traction in snow or mud but they don't. I've ended up stuck in snow (and once in mud), even in four wheel drive with the rear differential locked so both rear tires are being driven. Here's what I learned ... I keep the tractor in the smaller garage attached to the horse barn. It's doors are small ... 8'x8' and the only way I can back the tractor into it was to remove the top section of the "roll bar" that is part of the tractor. With the upper roll bar section removed it clears the top of the garage door trim by a half inch. So, this year with all the snow and ice the pavement right at the edge of the garage door was built up enough that I lost that half inch clearance. I actually caught the top of the roll bar that remains on the edge trim of the door opening. Removing the ice at the entrance was one option but instead I decided to deflate the tractor's rear tires a bit. Before doing so I did some Google reading on these kind of tires and discovered that deflating them would help with traction in the snow as well. They were inflated to 25 psi. The Google information recommended only 7-9 psi for best traction. I deflated them to 10 psi. It now clears the trim board on the garage by over an inch and more importantly the traction in deep snow is much improved. Yesterday I was out in the horse paddock clearing snow to give my wife's horse some room to move around without walking through belly high snow. I couldn't do it before. I'd just get stuck. |
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