Kernopelli
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2006
- Messages
- 2,209
- Location
- Carterville, Illinois
- Tractor
- Mitsubishi MTE2000D, Dig It 258 Mini Ex, Deere Z930A ZTR
With all the recent traction discusssions, I was curious about an idea I have planned to use but with our recent mild winters have not yet tried. I am a life long dirt bike rider and years back a forum I belonged to had a number of Northern States riders that used studded tires and knobbies with special ice screws with an aggressive head shape, screwed into the knobs of the tire for winter riding and ice racing (the screws are similar to self tapping sheet metal screws). I love to ride in the snow and one winter decided to try sheet metal screws in my tires. My primary concerns were that hard impacts or jumping would puncture the tube, that the screws would tear out of the knobs and quickly destroy the tire or that the screws would simply come out too easily and would not be effective. I put 1-2 screws in each knob ( depending on how big the knob was), after one ride I was hooked! It is nothing short of amazing. The traction in packed snow and ice is comparable, if not better, than riding on the best groomed loam with new knobbies. After 5 years I have found that I lose relatively few screws and have never suffered a flat. I have to admit that I was so impressed initially that I actually rode year around with screws for that first year after first trying it. For slimy spring time riding they really help dig in and when used on hard pack clay in the summer they give so much traction it is like riding on rails. As a side benefit it all but eliminated tire wear but I did have to occasionally replace lost screws or screws with worn heads . After removing the screws the holes basically seal themself and disappear and the tires don't noticably wear any more quickly either. The only downside is that the screws are slick on dry, paved surfaces and very rock ground.
Since my experience with dirt biking is that sheet metal screws that are approx. long enough to go in 2/3 to 3/4 the thickness of the rubber and placed in a pattern in a semi hard compound tire offer incredible ice and snow traction, do not destroy the tires or cause flats. I am certain that some will think this is nuts and that it would never work but I have seen that it can be far more viable than I first imagined. Yes, tractors produce a lot of tractional force but so does a 45-50 HP bike hitting objects at 60 mph with 500lbs of bike and rider so I don't think the end effect would be much different using them on tractor tires. I have been waiting for an icy/snowy year to try it out on the tractor. Has anyone ever heard or tried it with theirs?
Since my experience with dirt biking is that sheet metal screws that are approx. long enough to go in 2/3 to 3/4 the thickness of the rubber and placed in a pattern in a semi hard compound tire offer incredible ice and snow traction, do not destroy the tires or cause flats. I am certain that some will think this is nuts and that it would never work but I have seen that it can be far more viable than I first imagined. Yes, tractors produce a lot of tractional force but so does a 45-50 HP bike hitting objects at 60 mph with 500lbs of bike and rider so I don't think the end effect would be much different using them on tractor tires. I have been waiting for an icy/snowy year to try it out on the tractor. Has anyone ever heard or tried it with theirs?