Snow Equipment Owning/Operating Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow

   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow #1  

gladehound

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Mar 27, 2007
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Location
PA
Tractor
Kioti DS4510HS, Exmark Laser Z, Kioti LB1914
I know R-4's in snow has been discussed to death but after a quick search I couldn't find anything about cutting them for better performance. I recently picked up an Ideal Heated Knife, also known as a tire groover. With a little help from a forced air heater to really get the tires warm, it worked like a charm. (I tried to go to work on 10 degree F tires at first and it was slow going)

My plan is to both groove and sipe my R-4's for better traction. This evening, I did the grooving part. 20 minutes for the first rear tire, 15 minutes for the second (since I had some practice on the first). Here are some pictures of what I did. I'm hoping this improves snow traction some.

When I get a chance I will sipe them on either side of the grooves for even better traction in hard packed snow/ice. The theory is, the more biting edges the better the snow/ice traction.

It's snowing now, I'll see how they go in the morning! :thumbsup:
 

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   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow #2  
Nice job! Did you have to do some soul shearching before starting that?
 
   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow #3  
DO you ever load heavy with the FEL? If you do, and spin the tires slightly, siping will all the force to tear them up quick. Just a word to the wise.
 
   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow #5  
Did you make a template first or did you go freehand?

Looks good. Keep us posted.

~Kevin
 
   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow
  • Thread Starter
#6  
"Nice job! Did you have to do some soul shearching before starting that?"

Thanks! Not too much, I like to mess with stuff. :thumbsup:

"DO you ever load heavy with the FEL? If you do, and spin the tires slightly, siping will all the force to tear them up quick."

I hear you! I do take the tractor to it's limits. I'm going to sipe so that there is rubber connecting the lug on both sides of each sipe with just 4 sipes per lug. I think this should maintain enough strength. This is how the sipes are on my 7,000 pound truck which has much higher contact patch pressure and can spin all 4 on asphalt and has never torn a lug. So I think it will work out OK. I certainly have to be careful not to teke too much out! I've noticed that all the lugs have a 2x width to height ratio so I maintained that with the groove, only going 3/8" down with an inch remaining on each side. The groove is open ended on one side but the sipes will be close ended on both sides.

"Did you make a template first or did you go freehand?"

Free hand

I'll keep TBN posted on how this turns out both in terms of traction and long term durability of the tires. Now it's time to plow some snow! :thumbsup:
 
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   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow #8  
You could also put some metal screws into the lugs.

Ralph
 
   / Cutting / Groving / Siping R-4 for snow
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I used them this morning and traction in the rear was much improved. More than I thought it would be.

We had 6" of light snow. Not much of a challenge so I took it out of 4WD and put the 6' blade strait to let the snow pile up in front and plowed the 200 foot lane from the barn to the road without slipping a tire. The groves allowed the tires to hold snow on the surface of the lugs where it would normally just fall off and this gives much better traction and one reason snow tires work as well as they do. They worked so well that I don't think I'm going to sipe them. Not unless later I think I need more traction.

Yes, chains are fantastic for traction. But there are several reasons why avoid them.

1. surface damage to neighbors paved driveways and to my garage floor.
2. I don't have clearance for rear chains (design error in my opinion)
3. I have front chains and have used them and didn't like the damage to my garage floor or neighbors driveway.
4. I'm worried about over stressing the front axle with front chains and very heavy plow hanging off an already heavy bucket on a relatively small tractor.

I don't believe that increased tire wear is a real concern for the rears. In theory the increased wear would be proportional to increased contact pressure. So I might get about 10% faster tire wear in the rear.
After 420 hrs there is little wear on the rears, so I'd rather have the snow traction.

Siping on the other hand should not increase the wear rate so long as it's done in a way that the lugs don't chunk off since contact pressure is not changed.

The fronts are a different story and are at around 50% wear. I will not grove or sipe the fronts. There is too much contact pressure and the lugs are already only half as thick as the ones in the rear.
 
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