Road Salt....new tractor

   / Road Salt....new tractor #11  
The DOH uses some type of liquid - dispensed from a tanker truck. Based upon what I see that it does to vehicles - I'm glad I don't have to drive the tractor or my other vehicles in areas where that stuff is used. The running boards on my son's pickup melted right off after 3 winters driving where they use that stuff. He lives in Spokane.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #12  
I used to never replace brakes and brakelines- never needed to. Now with the salt that goes on the road, they rust though, freeze, etc.- Every vehicle. - new calipers, re-surfacing - not to mention the pads.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #13  
I started using fluid film, i had to buy off ebay but I like how it went on and plan on using it as long as I own my truck.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #14  
   / Road Salt....new tractor #15  
And nobody has posted the obvious? Direct the plow guys to plow the place correctly, or find ones that will? Seriously. You are paying them to plow it. They plow it right, or you find new. Why waste your time cleaning up after them? You live in a reasonably snowy area. If they aren't bright enough to plow it back a ways at the start of the season, and keep doing so, they probably don't deserve the business.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor
  • Thread Starter
#16  
And nobody has posted the obvious? Direct the plow guys to plow the place correctly, or find ones that will? Seriously. You are paying them to plow it. They plow it right, or you find new. Why waste your time cleaning up after them? You live in a reasonably snowy area. If they aren't bright enough to plow it back a ways at the start of the season, and keep doing so, they probably don't deserve the business.

The plow guys do a great job, the problem comes at the end of the storm when we need to move the cars and do another clean up and stack the snow. The plow guys would do this with their skid steer, but it's pretty expensive. I have been using my snowblower, but the tractor would be great to stack the snow.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Have you looked into an attachment for the trailer. Some boat trailers have a shield that bolts to the tongue of the trailer. It protects the front of the boat from road grime and debris. Or something like a snowmobile trailer has. They have a hard nose to the trailer. This also protects the front of the snowmobile from road salt and and blowing snow.here are a couple links

http://http://www.trailer-rockguard.com

http://http://www.floeintl.com/aluminum-trailers/trailer-accessories/

One of these would work great! The problem now is I need to have the bucket curled over the front of the trailer. I am looking at a larger trailer, but it will be a year or so before I can get one.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #18  
Something I tried,
So far so good.
I had a can or two of spray on 'gravel guard' that I applied to the underside of my fenders.
It repels gravel, protects from rust and deadens noise. Best is rust protection.
Also nothing sticks to it.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #19  
The DOH uses some type of liquid - dispensed from a tanker truck. Based upon what I see that it does to vehicles - I'm glad I don't have to drive the tractor or my other vehicles in areas where that stuff is used. The running boards on my son's pickup melted right off after 3 winters driving where they use that stuff. He lives in Spokane.

I can't speak for WA, but a lot of highway departments are using Beet Juice like in RimGuard for de-icing highways. They dispense it from a tanker trailer as you describe. They also use a brine solution, but are using beet juice more because it's biodegradable and salt has been deemed a hazardous substance. They typicall do this just before a storm so snow doesn't stick to the road surface and turn to ice.
 
   / Road Salt....new tractor #20  
The salt isn't going to do very much as long as you take care of your equipment. I have three tractors that I run on the road during the winter feeding hay, usually on the road about ten hours a week with the tractors. Any day you get a warm day just go out and pressure wash it off. None of my tractors have any rust and our newest one is 2012 with the oldest being a 2005. It's just like your vehicle, if you don't spray it off, then it will rust, if you spray it off, it will last much longer. What you are proposing is not justifiable for as many times as you're going to be hauling it. Just drive it down the road and spray it off when you can.
 

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