Rather then start a new thread, I thought I'd revive this one.
I got my 3/4" spacers for my L3301's rear wheels, they fit perfect and it was an easy 1 hour job getting them on, now my brand new cross link chains don't rub the inside of the fenders! On the front, I have an old pair of pickup tire chains I hadn't needed in years that I cut down to fit. Both sets of chains now fit perfect and stay up on top of the rubber so very effective. This is the first time I've chained up, due to a tougher then normal winter here and an ice base underneath. Here's my question: I got a comment from someone (who saw a picture of my tractor's front tires, and he noticed they were chained) and he went out of his way to tell me that if I had also had the rears chained, I was asking for big trouble!
Here is my take.....I'm on gravel, with ice on top, and I can't begin to count all the old beater 4x4 pickups I know of that have had all four chained up for years, without issues. We know there are old wife tales, call them urban mechanical legends, that perpetuate. My favorite is: don't set a battery on a concrete floor, it will suck the power out of it. NOT TRUE! So what I'm asking here is not a repeating of "I heard it's bad to chain up all four", but comments from those that have done it for years with no issues. Sure, I can see it possibly working the differential more, I guess, but to the point that things will break? I think not. OR, if anyone can tell a first hand story of knowing about problems caused by doing so, someone who did it and then blew their gearing out somehow. I'll venture to say no one will be able to offer up a personal first hand account of the practice for sure causing a major, directly linked, issue. This is different of course then a general uneasiness of possibly causing future damage, heck anything we do with our tractors can do that, when we work them hard. One comment I heard on this site some time ago sticks in my mind, the issue was wheel weights, and someone posted he thought they were a bad idea, as they could cause premature wear on the wheel bearings! I had to laugh, these are TRACTORS after all, (though I have seen comments here about people waxing their them, so I get some tend to pamper them) so please, no "I'm not taking the chance" comments. I'm looking for hard mechanical first hand experiences, not general "not a good idea"
Obviously, my mind is made up! Partially/mostly because I just spent $238.00 on these spacers so I could for the first time use the $250.00 chains I bought last year, and I have seen how effective they are in operation. On the other hand, the fronts were paid for decades ago, or maybe I got them free...I can't remember, so no big deal to take them off. I started with the front chained only, and while it helped a lot, I'd say chaining the rears helped even more, again. This now allows me to slowly eat into a deep drift with the blower without spinning tires on the ice underneath, and also NOT using speed when I plow with the front blade but just going slow and steady. What would be interesting, and also make this post a waste of time, would be to keep my expensive rear chain setup as is for the rest of the winter, but simply take the fronts off. The front chains though helped quite a bit when plowing with the blade at an angle, in directional control, but I could live without them.