Tractors are not designed for use in snow.This last snow has me sliding all over the place it's not deep only like 8 inches but had lots of frozen sleet.
It seems that the other tractor with turf tires does better?
Whats up with that?
The MX has R4s and the M has R1s. The MX has very poor traction in snow whereas the M will walk up a 40% grade in deep snow with ease. The converse is that the R4s on snow covered asphalt are a lot better than the R1s. There is no one size fits all but I ran screw in studs when I had the BX that worked great, but I didn't have asphalt then. Chains aren't great on asphalt either so you have to figure out a system that works for you.This last snow has me sliding all over the place it's not deep only like 8 inches but had lots of frozen sleet.
It seems that the other tractor with turf tires does better?
Whats up with that?
I grooved the R4 tires on the MX and also found that it helped with traction on both asphalt and gravel, but going off-piste in the MX is never a good idea. It's an awesome tractor in so many ways, and my first choice for blowing and pushing snow, but not my first choice for heading into a snow covered field to do some work.I have R4's on my tractor and have a short, a bit steep incline that I have to go up to get to my barn. Unless the snow is light and fluffy I can't get enough traction to get up there. I grooved my tires and that helped some.
My last tractor had R1 tires and never had a problem unless it was icy.
theres a lot of wisdom here. No one size fits all.The MX has R4s and the M has R1s. The MX has very poor traction in snow whereas the M will walk up a 40% grade in deep snow with ease. The converse is that the R4s on snow covered asphalt are a lot better than the R1s. There is no one size fits all but I ran screw in studs when I had the BX that worked great, but I didn't have asphalt then. Chains aren't great on asphalt either so you have to figure out a system that works for you.
You mention having lots of sleet. Sleet looks a lot like snow but it doesn’t act like snow. We get more sleet here than snow. Had about 4” of sleet outside yesterday. No snow at all. Looked a lot like snow, but if you put your hand out to steer your sled away from the rip rap pit at the tail race on the back of the dam (yes we did that), the “snow” felt like frozen 80 grit sandpaper.This last snow has me sliding all over the place it's not deep only like 8 inches but had lots of frozen sleet.
It seems that the other tractor with turf tires does better?
Whats up with that?
This last snow has me sliding all over the place it's not deep only like 8 inches but had lots of frozen sleet.
It seems that the other tractor with turf tires does better?
Whats up with that?
[/QUOTE
Over the years I had every style of tractor tires and when it gets icy it's time to get the chains out. With that being said if you have a lot of asphalt or concrete chains are going to do some damage. Some are better than others. Normally with my skid steer I can get enough wheel speed to keep going threw the drift with ice under the snow. I am lucky in my drive ways I don't have any real deep ditches I can go off into but enough I have been stuck a few times and usually can push myself out with the bucket. I have enough concrete in front of buildings I don't want to run chains.
Yes.This last snow has me sliding all over the place it's not deep only like 8 inches but had lots of frozen sleet.
It seems that the other tractor with turf tires does better?
Whats up with that?
You want the grooves to retain snow. Nothing sticks to snow like more snow. That’s the whole reason for siping. Nothing wrong with grooving in the other direction, but if they don’t retain snow, they don’t work.I should have added to my #6 post I only grooved the tires laterally and I can see where the groves fill up with snow. Once it warms up (June???) I plan on adding front to back grooves to hopefully help clean out the lateral grooves and also add less slide slip of the tractor.
Good to know thanks! But I was also concerned about the side slip, would adding front to back grooves help this without compromising the forward traction as you mentioned?You want the grooves to retain snow. Nothing sticks to snow like more snow. That’s the whole reason for siping. Nothing wrong with grooving in the other direction, but if they don’t retain snow, they don’t work.
Yes, it should.Good to know thanks! But I was also concerned about the side slip, would adding front to back grooves help this without compromising the forward traction as you mentioned?