HSSC
Member
Those are standard cross links and they are hardened as they are the boys put to work, on the ground, giving your vehicle traction. I never bothered welding any of them, only attached them to other links. Just run a grinder over them and create a kerf and a larger set of channel locks and they break rather quick. All of those cross links at one point, were full links. I just cut them to the length for what I needed.Hey Ken,
thanks for the pic's they help a lot. After looking online etc for chains I've decided to make my own.. the one question I have is the "twisted link" cross chains.. did you just twist your own to make them ... It looks to me like you used the same side chain and just twisted them with your vise ... do I have that right?
I called my local DOT garage and they acted like I was insane asking for their old chains.. almost like I pay their salary or something... pfff!!
Thusly I'm going to buy bulk chain and start bending... I feel the testosterone increasing just thinking about it.
tractor on
The conditions on the highway last year ( fall ) was icy and some what thin as I traveled those same roads later in the day with full loads of concrete on dry roads. The broken chains were everywhere. Many of which were like new.
It was a bonanza. Kind of funny how it all worked out cause, I'm traveling those same roads this year and not to much to harvest this year.
Maybe those truck drivers learned how to tighten up their chains.:confused3: