Tractor chains for snow and ice advice

   / Tractor chains for snow and ice advice
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Someday I’ll retire this tractor to easy farm work like haying, berry picking, brush cutting, and tractor rides.😜
Meanwhile, here is a few pictures of what it gets to do.
 

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   / Tractor chains for snow and ice advice #33  
Hello and thanks in advance.
Just looking for advice on what to get for my tractor this winter…that won’t cost me a fortune 😬
I have a fairly steep and approximately 15’ ridge to climb while hauling logs out. Logging my property for past couple years and selling firewood as I go. With a pto winch I can do so through the winter too and just plow the logging road I made.
The land is mostly flat but this ridge is going to a pain this winter.

I will be bending my fenders out to make enough room for the chains. But chains need to be tight or it could end badly. So i am particularly worried about the ladder style and any slop from them.

Definitely looking for advice from people with experience dealing with different chains in snow and ice. We get about 12’ if snow average around my area.
Here are possible options at this time:

My local Branson dealer has these for $643
Ladder style from Quality Chains

Glacier Chain Supply in Anchorage has these for $877
Aquiline MPC (Multi Purpose Chains)


I can get these Piedmont Duo style from Tirechainsonline for $600 with free shipping to Tacoma Wa where Carlile MyConnect shipping can ship it to their Anchorage terminal for around $60.

When I was installing chains on my Ford 1210 4WD for use on extremely hilly terrain, I learned I needed the ‘2 link’ kind not the ‘4 link’ kind. That’s the spacing for the cross chains as the attach to the side chains. Getting them on right and tight is critical or you’ll end up lying on the ground far from your maintenance building. I modified some turnbuckles to tension the chains on the outside of the wheels during installation. Then used another turnbuckle the tension the last connection on the side chain and used a CLEVIS to finally put those outer chains together. I found the clevis gave me the tightest chains.

I had steep clay soil where it was difficult to even walk when it was wet. Those chains never came off all four wheels.
 
   / Tractor chains for snow and ice advice #34  
That's probably the best way to do it, rather than bending the crap out of fenders to make room.
Pretty sure the fenders and floor of the cab are integrated, molded plastic parts, one per side with a seam in the floor. OP, have you tried putting a magnet on the finder to make sure it is metal. Are the fenders about 1/4-inch thick? If so they are plastic. Cutting or trying to bend the plastic can result in cracking. If you cut off the rim, the fender will probably crack.

Good things about the plastic body panels are: If they fade, they polish out, and you can't polish off the color coat, because the color is integral to the plastic. And, they are impossible to dent, might break, but won't dent or rust.
 
   / Tractor chains for snow and ice advice
  • Thread Starter
#35  
Pretty sure the fenders and floor of the cab are integrated, molded plastic parts, one per side with a seam in the floor. OP, have you tried putting a magnet on the finder to make sure it is metal. Are the fenders about 1/4-inch thick? If so they are plastic. Cutting or trying to bend the plastic can result in cracking. If you cut off the rim, the fender will probably crack.

Good things about the plastic body panels are: If they fade, they polish out, and you can't polish off the color coat, because the color is integral to the plastic. And, they are impossible to dent, might break, but won't dent or rust.
Yes, they are metal. The Branson (mine is a 4520r) was a little more beefy than comparable ones from other brands. Why I chose it…along with no computer so I can work on it and eliminate the DPF when the warranty is expired and cheaper price.
 

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