home made tire studs

LRP

New member
Sep 29, 2010
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canada
i haven,t lost any yet and i added the second oil line to the blade
lift cyl so i now can lift the front wheels of the ground when plowing.
are your tires checked and cracked???? that could account for looseing
the studs. like rotten wood, no holding power.
 

meanjean

Member

Equipment
Kubota MX4700
Aug 10, 2010
922
2
18
Hazelridge, Manitoba
Studs are now ground down and back in.
No where near the same traction but looks like they will stay in this time.
A few of the lugs are pretty beat up, I hope they hold thru the Winter.

I bought a set of chains, came off a semi truck.
I'm concerned they will smash the lugs to pieces.
Hesitant to install them.
 

LRP

New member
Sep 29, 2010
202
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0
canada
update; i,ve been pushing snow 3 days in a row and forcast is for 6 more
days of snow. i,m running out of room so i started pushing snow back where
i normaly don,t plow. the little bota was makeing the horses sweat. anyhow ,
after an hour of churning on bare frozen groung, i noticed that about half
of my studs were backed out some. i drained some coffee and retightened
them down so they were recessed in a bit like the ones that haden,t moved.
i pushed snow for another hr and they are looking good. knock on
wood, i haven,t lost one yet.
 

meanjean

Member

Equipment
Kubota MX4700
Aug 10, 2010
922
2
18
Hazelridge, Manitoba
I've lost a pile of studs now and have abandoned the tire stud idea.

I bought a pair of tire chains but they ride between the lugs of the tire, not helpful.

I bought a set of used rims and tires, 19.5 inch rims.
The tires are readily available and much cheaper than the current 22s.
Chains fit great.
I am having a section of steel fabricated with the bolt pattern I need including the 4.25 inch circle in which the axel ends ride on.
Should be ready just in time for Spring!!

Will post pics.
 

gpreuss

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3200DT w/FEL, K650 Backhoe, 5' Rotary, 40" Howard Rotavator, 6' Rhino blade
Oct 9, 2011
1,166
6
0
Spokane, WA
So, what is the verdict? Home made studs ($0.50 ea) using 18-8 SS sheet metal screws- #14 hex washer type, Maxigrips ($1.10 ea) or tire chains (about $250/pair, on EBAY)? I have brand new R4 tires, and don't want to tear them up, particularly.
I hope to put regular car chains on the front.
 

meanjean

Member

Equipment
Kubota MX4700
Aug 10, 2010
922
2
18
Hazelridge, Manitoba
I wouldn't go with studs again, I'm still picking them off the lawn and drive way.

Look for semi truck tire chains.
Much cheaper and will fit proper with a bit of work.
 

skeets

Well-known member

Equipment
BX 2360 /B2601
Oct 2, 2009
14,212
2,870
113
SW Pa
I agree MJ,, fill the tires and use chains, though Im not sure about the use of Semi truck chains, the reason is I think a lot of the chain would find its way into the valleys of the tread and not be giving you the full traction, but if maybe you took 2 cross chains and linked them together then the next 2 and so on so the chain would be running over the tops of the tread in an X pattern XXXXXXXX kinda thing,, or am I out in left field some place?
 

hodge

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Lifetime Member

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John Deere 790 John Deere 310 backhoe Bobcat 743
Nov 19, 2010
2,861
373
83
Love, VA
I agree MJ,, fill the tires and use chains, though Im not sure about the use of Semi truck chains, the reason is I think a lot of the chain would find its way into the valleys of the tread and not be giving you the full traction, but if maybe you took 2 cross chains and linked them together then the next 2 and so on so the chain would be running over the tops of the tread in an X pattern XXXXXXXX kinda thing,, or am I out in left field some place?
No, that is a good idea. Tire chains don't work too well on ag tires, because of the fact that the chains ride in the valleys. Linking the cross chains would help.
 

meanjean

Member

Equipment
Kubota MX4700
Aug 10, 2010
922
2
18
Hazelridge, Manitoba
I tried crossing the chains over the rice tires, not good enough.
Very little of the chain would contact the ground rendering them useless.
You need a smooth (but not bald) tire.