otus_branch
Silver Member
Here's my situation: one Kubota L-39 with the standard Industrial R-4 tires, one 8' rear straight blade , and one very steep north-facing driveway. After today's ~4" snowfall, I tried to do some clearing so that my BIL could get out in his Toyota Prius which is the kind of car that will bottom-out on the crown of my road in the best of weather (otherwise, I wouldn't bother pushing 4" of snow...). Thanks to the wisdom of TBN posters, I knew to reverse and angle my blade to minimize gravel disturbance and make for easier snow clearing.
The first pass, going downhill in 4wd went OK. Then the L-39 lost traction near the bottom of the hill when I attempted to climb and clear snow at the same time on the way back up. No problem, I just back-down, raise the blade, stomp on the diff locker, and throw it into gear. This time, I make it 3/4 of the way up, and then lose traction at the steepest point. The L-39 starts skidding backwards as wheels continue spinning forwards. YIKES!!! I manage to keep it more or less straight on the hill with the steering wheel, and jam the shuttle into reverse, which slows the descent and averts disaster. So I back down the hill, and, fool that I can be, attempt to climb my drive AGAIN, but this time in a lower gear. Similar near-disaster results, except that this time the Kub almost turns sideways during its rearward skid.* Enough I say! I back down once more, and park my tractor in the lower field, defeated.
Clearly I need more traction for my tractor. The L-39 is only a backup-snow-clearer, since i will soon have a plow for my Arctic Cat ATV, but I sure would like it to be a viable backup-option. I guess the obvious answer is some chains, but the pain of putting-on and taking-off is a little daunting. Are there quick-attach options in the tractor chain world? Are there viable options besides chains? Thanks,
-otus
* - This second attempt probably belongs in the 'Dumbest things done with tractor' thread, but at least I had my seatbelt on...
The first pass, going downhill in 4wd went OK. Then the L-39 lost traction near the bottom of the hill when I attempted to climb and clear snow at the same time on the way back up. No problem, I just back-down, raise the blade, stomp on the diff locker, and throw it into gear. This time, I make it 3/4 of the way up, and then lose traction at the steepest point. The L-39 starts skidding backwards as wheels continue spinning forwards. YIKES!!! I manage to keep it more or less straight on the hill with the steering wheel, and jam the shuttle into reverse, which slows the descent and averts disaster. So I back down the hill, and, fool that I can be, attempt to climb my drive AGAIN, but this time in a lower gear. Similar near-disaster results, except that this time the Kub almost turns sideways during its rearward skid.* Enough I say! I back down once more, and park my tractor in the lower field, defeated.
Clearly I need more traction for my tractor. The L-39 is only a backup-snow-clearer, since i will soon have a plow for my Arctic Cat ATV, but I sure would like it to be a viable backup-option. I guess the obvious answer is some chains, but the pain of putting-on and taking-off is a little daunting. Are there quick-attach options in the tractor chain world? Are there viable options besides chains? Thanks,
-otus
* - This second attempt probably belongs in the 'Dumbest things done with tractor' thread, but at least I had my seatbelt on...