Are Spider Bungie Cords for Tire Chains Useless?

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by PE_T, Dec 17, 2018.

  1. Cattleman84

    Cattleman84 Road Train Member

    9,894
    70,469
    Nov 1, 2017
    The Sticks, Idaho
    0
    There are a few states (Colorado?? I cant remember, but its more than 1 state for sure) that are starting to put out legislation that basically says that cable style chains or snow socks are not allowed as a substitute for actual tire chains for CMVs. And thereby you can be ticketed and not allowed to continue if you dont have a set of actual chains on board.
     
    Dave_in_AZ, stwik, PE_T and 1 other person Thank this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Gumper

    Gumper Road Train Member

    1,572
    3,805
    Jan 7, 2018
    Butte, MT
    0
    I believe the socks are approved, but cables are not. I wouldn’t use cables on an ATV let alone a CMV.
     
    stwik, Cattleman84, PE_T and 1 other person Thank this.
  4. Jazz1

    Jazz1 Road Train Member

    2,373
    4,971
    May 7, 2012
    Thunder Bay On
    0
    No bungee will maintain its flexibility in -30 weather. They are useless in the cold on chains
    If you hang your chains correctly and tighten cams should be no issues. Carry quicklinks for fast repairs. If chains too long shorten them
     
    Last edited: Dec 18, 2018
    Lepton1, Dave_in_AZ, AModelCat and 2 others Thank this.
  5. PE_T

    PE_T Road Train Member

    Tire socks are now approved in all the US and either all or most of Canada.

    Tire Sock and Snow Chain Regulations by State - AutoSock
     
    stwik and Cattleman84 Thank this.
  6. mnmover

    mnmover Road Train Member

    1,237
    1,104
    Apr 5, 2009
    Lichfield MN
    0
    The cable chains have requirements that the side cables must be 3/8th of an inch thickness.
     
    PE_T Thanks this.
  7. Rubber duck kw

    Rubber duck kw Road Train Member

    6,092
    17,685
    Dec 9, 2017
    0
    Lepton1 Thanks this.
  8. PE_T

    PE_T Road Train Member

    I read somewhere in this forum that tire socks are only good if you will be driving in areas with lots of winter activity because driving tire socks on dry pavement will rip them, and those things are not cheap. Tire socks are also not supposed to be driven past 20mph or 30kph.
     
    Lepton1 Thanks this.
  9. Tug Toy

    Tug Toy Road Train Member

    6,939
    72,579
    Jul 4, 2015
    Corn field
    0
    I have a set of socks. Light, easy to store, seem to work just fine in the couple of situations I needed them. I try not to operate in areas I would need chains. But I’m legal when working in the area.

    If I needed chains all the time I’d probably buy and carry real chains.
     
    PE_T Thanks this.
  10. HoneyBadger67

    HoneyBadger67 Road Train Member

    2,056
    4,512
    Dec 15, 2018
    Savannah, TN
    0

    I actually came on here today looking for tips installing chains on a truck with full fiberglasss fenders. A pair of 4X4s would seem the perfect solution. Thanks.
    I've only run the west a wee bit since I left my regional gig out that way 11yrs ago when I was just a newbie in a truck. I didn't learn all the tricks for making winter life easier....
     
    SteerTire Thanks this.
  11. SteerTire

    SteerTire Road Train Member

    1,414
    2,346
    Nov 5, 2018
    Behind the wheel
    0
    If you actually have the room. Use 2x4’s stacked. Nailed together. One shorter than the other to create a ramp effect. Climbing on top of an actual 4x4 can be a problem in snow and ice. ;)
     
    PE_T and HoneyBadger67 Thank this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.