J0E
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- J0e
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2018
- Threads
- 55
- Messages
- 1,353
- Reaction score
- 1,121
- Location
- Hawaii, MT, SLC, NYC
- Website
- bt39.com
- Vehicle(s)
- 2021 JLR, 05 LJR on 43s
- Build Thread
- Link
- Occupation
- Drywall construction - reel estate
Sounds like the perfect chains for your needs, fast on, fast off. Can you put more than 3 per tire? Can you provide a link?My traction aids are soft plastic pads with studs imbedded in them. They strap around the wheels, 3 to a tire.
Agreed, I never needed them on public roads in Montana, it's once you start off-roading, climbing, etc.In both my JK and JL, I’ve never felt the need for chains. And I’ve had snow over the axles on both on roads, and up to the bumper on trail. J
I'm guessing Michigan, like Montana, has dry snow. With dry snow you can sometimes push snow over the bumper. But chains give you 10x the traction in deep snow, letting you push more snow. If the snow is wet, forget it, even with chains you can't push any snow. Having had to chain up several hundred times, I have had the need for all 4 chains.
A frequent debate when you only need one pair, front or back? I've probably chained up one axle a hundred times too. You don't always need 2 pair.
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