Tire choice for snow removal

chief36chevy

Member

Equipment
BX2360
Oct 21, 2018
31
1
8
Annville
I have a BX2360 with a FEL. I have lawn tires on it now but the last snow that we had in south central PA is terrible this week. I need to know what tires would recommended for this weather. I was thinking R4 treads.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
 

OntheRidge

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
Kubota L47 TLB, Homestead 55" grapple, LP 1684 rear blade, WR Long 84" snowplow
Nov 1, 2020
354
407
63
25427
R4s are terrible in snow, I have heard R14s are much better.
 
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pokey1416

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
Grand L4060HSTC, BH92 Backhoe, HLA Snow Pusher, Dirt Dog Tiller, EA DiscHarrow
Jun 24, 2020
564
835
93
SW Michigan
Agree with @OntheRidge however, I did groove my R4's along with several others on this site and it did help.
 
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Sidekick

Well-known member

Equipment
Kioti CK2620SE cab, RTV-X, BX2360, Z726XKW-3-60
Jul 29, 2023
650
624
93
N.Y,
I used to just put chains on the rear of my BX and it was fine with turf tires. Also some added weight helps. New machine has loaded R14s and they are awesome in most snow but it's almost 5000 pounds.
 
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85Hokie

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Staff member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
BX-25D ,PTB. Under Armor, '90&'92-B7100HST's, '06 BX1850 FEL
Jul 13, 2013
10,791
2,595
113
Bedford - VA
I have a BX2360 with a FEL. I have lawn tires on it now but the last snow that we had in south central PA is terrible this week. I need to know what tires would recommended for this weather. I was thinking R4 treads.
Does anyone have any suggestions?

Rather than switch to another tire - get some spacers and chains. Both will help and be very cost effective!
 
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je1279

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Equipment
LX2610 w/ 60" MMM, LP 72" Snow Plow, EA Wicked 55" Grapple, and Woods 60" BB
Dec 6, 2020
783
529
93
Upstate NY
Love my R14's when plowing snow.

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North Idaho Wolfman

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Staff member
Lifetime Member

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L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
Jun 9, 2013
31,158
7,107
113
Sandpoint, ID
Just get chains you don't get more grass than you do snow.
 
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DustyRusty

Well-known member

Equipment
2020 BX23S, BX2822 Snowblower, Curtis Deluxe Cab,
Nov 8, 2015
6,411
5,011
113
North East CT
I have about 600 pounds in a weight bucket and snow blow without chains and don't have any problem unless it is very wet snow and I try pushing it with the plow. Been doing it this way for almost a couple of decades first with a BX22 and now with a BX23S
 
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Mitjam

Well-known member

Equipment
M-108, M6-111, Lx3520, Rtv-520 and LandPride implements
Jan 14, 2013
286
299
63
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
I have a BX2360 with a FEL. I have lawn tires on it now but the last snow that we had in south central PA is terrible this week. I need to know what tires would recommended for this weather. I was thinking R4 treads.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
I have had a bunch of sub compact and compact sized tractors, and for and all around tire the r14 have been so good. I mean in deep snow, mud and ice,chains are your best friend. I wouldn’t buy a new smaller tractor without r14 that my opinion.
 
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jimh406

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
Kubota L2501 with R4 tires
Jan 29, 2021
2,417
1,837
113
Western MT
Turf tires are supposedly the best in snow.

I'd also just get a set of chains. Those are some pretty small tires, so installing chains should be pretty easy.

R4s are bad in snow. However, R14s aren't as tough as R4s, so you always have to tradeoff something. For my uses, R4s and chains for winter makes more sense.
 

je1279

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
LX2610 w/ 60" MMM, LP 72" Snow Plow, EA Wicked 55" Grapple, and Woods 60" BB
Dec 6, 2020
783
529
93
Upstate NY
I have about 600 pounds in a weight bucket and snow blow without chains and don't have any problem unless it is very wet snow and I try pushing it with the plow. Been doing it this way for almost a couple of decades first with a BX22 and now with a BX23S
Weight in the rear is definitely your friend. I'd estimate my ballast box at ~700lbs between the large rocks and sand fill. With ~3" of snow, I'm fine without it, but with 6" or more, (especially with the heavy wet stuff) it makes a huge difference.