etgjr
Member
R1\'s vs. R4\'s one more time, please
Hi All,
I am veeeery close to a 4330HST w/853FEL!
I was all set to get R4's (loaded). I think I have read every tire post going back 2 years. Now I am not sure! Most people seem to mow and they are in the R4 or Turf quandary. My quandary is will the R4's give me enough traction in the woods? I have read a few post where guys are in the woods and they flatly stated the R4's don't work.
Please offer you opinions based on you experience with my intended uses.
To recap my use:
240a mostly hardwoods.
Little to no mowing.
Brush Hogging to reclaim woods roads.
Knock down 4 or 5 old farm builds and dispose of.
Plant and maintain wildlife food plots.
Maintain ditches and roads (back blade).
Build pole buiding. (Site work, post hole digger, etc.)
Build a pond.
Total of about 4 miles of woods roads, break down to about 10% steep, 60% moderate, and 30% flat.
Eventually I will get a snowblower to keep access open in the winter. We typically get 200+ inches of the white stuff each year. The snow work will be on flat ground,
Thanks all for a great education site!
Ed
Hi All,
I am veeeery close to a 4330HST w/853FEL!
I was all set to get R4's (loaded). I think I have read every tire post going back 2 years. Now I am not sure! Most people seem to mow and they are in the R4 or Turf quandary. My quandary is will the R4's give me enough traction in the woods? I have read a few post where guys are in the woods and they flatly stated the R4's don't work.
Please offer you opinions based on you experience with my intended uses.
To recap my use:
240a mostly hardwoods.
Little to no mowing.
Brush Hogging to reclaim woods roads.
Knock down 4 or 5 old farm builds and dispose of.
Plant and maintain wildlife food plots.
Maintain ditches and roads (back blade).
Build pole buiding. (Site work, post hole digger, etc.)
Build a pond.
Total of about 4 miles of woods roads, break down to about 10% steep, 60% moderate, and 30% flat.
Eventually I will get a snowblower to keep access open in the winter. We typically get 200+ inches of the white stuff each year. The snow work will be on flat ground,
Thanks all for a great education site!
Ed