Impassible for you but not for them.....:joker:
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You guys are implying that aggressive tires destroy trails. In fact, that is not the case. The idiot behind the handlebars destroy them. I ride my bike around my property all the time and there is not one rut to be found anywhere and the same goes where I hunt deer. I sure appreciate the extra bite in the snow this time of year. Pretty difficult to rut frozen ground.
Thank for all the tips folks ..... gotta rebuild the bank account before the tires LOL
Sled all the way for me....there have been countless times where my buddies on bikes can't get out because of pressure cracks like the ones on Simcoe over the past few days....also I have helped pull more atvs out of slush or deep snow then I have sleds...and I own both...atv blow in the snow..come to my place and I'll prove it to you
Saw this pic today...reminded me of this thread..
This will do you nicely :)
http://img.izismile.com/img/img8/201...686_640_25.jpg
Saw that last fall ..... Best of both worlds and I think i read it's heated as well ... LOL
There is a reason that sand tire are wide and flat. They are designed to ride ON TOP of the sand. Mud lites dig holes and throw the mud out the back. Works the same with snow except the snow does not have the weight of the mud. For ice or packed snow you need STEEL to get a bite.
Either way, once you bottom out, you stop.
I have two areas with erosion problems on the hills, both are from a visitor spinning aggressive tires trying to get traction. Been going up that hill for ten years before any damage was done, been five years repairing it.....
This winter I added chains to the front of my tractor. Normally I just have them on the rear. I am now dragging logs out of areas that I could not even drive thru in the past ten years....but I still must plow off enough snow so I am not bottomed out.