Snow chains

   / Snow chains #21  
Blue Knife is correct. As far as the ride goes your tire pressure still matters.
 
   / Snow chains #22  
The chains come from the factory intentionally too long in order to accommodate a variety of tire sizes, wear levels and rim widths.
Shrug. I wouldn't know how that works. The only chains I ever worked with were used. One set was inherited from my grandfather, and when those eventually wore out I replaced the cross chains myself, cutting them the right length so they would fit.
 
   / Snow chains #23  
Just a trick for when your are putting chains on the tires for the first time to get them fitted. Take and jack the rear tires off the ground so that both tires are off the ground. It makes it a lot easier to get the chains fitted to the tires because you can turn the tires to get them fitted tight.
 
   / Snow chains #24  
This is my special tool for tightening the camlock. Helps get the chains real tight.
 

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   / Snow chains #25  
I have the same type of chain on my tractor. They're very bumpy. That's how they are but a really good grab on ice
 
   / Snow chains #26  
I cleared the driveway over the weekend and noticed that the ride was REALLY bumpy. much worse than years prior. I had been operating it without the blower on the three point - just using the plow blade on the loader.

When I put the blower on the three point, the ride smoothed right out.

All this to say, if you are getting a bumpy ride, and don't have weight on the three point, add an implement and see if that smooths it out.
 
   / Snow chains #27  
Just a trick for when your are putting chains on the tires for the first time to get them fitted. Take and jack the rear tires off the ground so that both tires are off the ground. It makes it a lot easier to get the chains fitted to the tires because you can turn the tires to get them fitted tight.
That is how I always install them - lay the chain out on the floor, slide it under the tire, pull the end of the chain up on the lugs, then roll the tire forward to pull the chain up over the top. Hook up the cam, then the hook on the inside, install bungees and done.
 
   / Snow chains
  • Thread Starter
#28  
I never had so much problems putting snow chains on my pick up truck.
 
   / Snow chains #29  

Tractor chains are heavy. Driving them on, like in this video will almost guarentee they go on tight and centered.
If they were not specifically sized for your tire size, you may need snow chain tools to modify the spacings of the crosschains.
Obviously they need modifying as the sidechains are way loose. You should never need bungees to pull the sidechains in like your picture shows. If done correctly, no tensioners are necessary
 

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