AbleGuy
Officious Intermeddler
Use of studded tires would be a very hard habit to break for me if I still lived in the upper Rocky Mountain west, despite that kind of info. Our many years of successful personal experience running two sets of tires and rims (AT’s or M&S in the dry, warmer months, and walnut shell, siped, studs in the winter) would trump the magazine recco’s.
I see you’re in Montana, so I’m curious about your personal experiences. Driving in some of the most brutal winter weather while living up there close to the Canadian border, in intense swirling whiteouts and heavy blizzard conditions on ice covered roads, or my late night commutes in sub zero temps on dark, winding snow covered unplowed road, equipped with the above combo never, ever let us down or left us in the ditch.
And I literally still have some lingering nightmare memories of absolutely horrible roads driven on, ones that were closed for public safety almost immediately after we’d traversed them...but ones that we did manage to travel on safely to get back to our home or distant work destinations in those Arctic conditions. So, while I respect good scientific data and research, this is one area where I’d have to revert to learned, proven behavior that worked if/when we ever move back to any of those areas.
I guess I’m just too old of a dog to learn these new tricks...but it seems from reading that Outside bit that for the most safety conscious folks, having three sets of tires and rims might be warranted, AT or M&S for most of the year, studs for the coldest, iciest heart of winter, and the “soft tread “ snow tires for early and late winter. Seems like an unreasonable burden though.
I see you’re in Montana, so I’m curious about your personal experiences. Driving in some of the most brutal winter weather while living up there close to the Canadian border, in intense swirling whiteouts and heavy blizzard conditions on ice covered roads, or my late night commutes in sub zero temps on dark, winding snow covered unplowed road, equipped with the above combo never, ever let us down or left us in the ditch.
And I literally still have some lingering nightmare memories of absolutely horrible roads driven on, ones that were closed for public safety almost immediately after we’d traversed them...but ones that we did manage to travel on safely to get back to our home or distant work destinations in those Arctic conditions. So, while I respect good scientific data and research, this is one area where I’d have to revert to learned, proven behavior that worked if/when we ever move back to any of those areas.
I guess I’m just too old of a dog to learn these new tricks...but it seems from reading that Outside bit that for the most safety conscious folks, having three sets of tires and rims might be warranted, AT or M&S for most of the year, studs for the coldest, iciest heart of winter, and the “soft tread “ snow tires for early and late winter. Seems like an unreasonable burden though.
Last edited: