We love our new Oliver tractor we lovingly dubbed “The Hulk” (big, green, and VERY strong). But the first day Will used it to move a round bale of hay, he got stuck. Not in deep snow — it was on plowed yard. But it was pointed downhill and it wouldn’t back up. I had to pull him out with our truck! How humbling was that?

Will knew immediately he needed tire chains or continue repeating that event. Our friend and neighbor, Jerry, had a set he’d sell, but Will quickly found out (after digging them out of the snow and ice that they were buried under) that they were way too narrow, although plenty long enough. Okay, that was $150. It was a good buy but they were useless. Unless…

…Will set about figuring a way to make them the right size. First, he picked up a bucket of old truck tire chains from a 2½ ton truck cheap at Do-Bid.com. Then he went down to his “junk” pile and brought two big, heavy-duty springs home. Using the torch, he cut down one side of the spring, separating the spring into a bucket full of rings, cut open on one side.

Rings

He cut lengths of chain out of the old truck tire chains, five links each. Then we set about making the old chains wider. First, he heated and opened each double-side hook so he could slip the new chain pieces onto them. Then he heated and bent the rings so he could slip them over both the big links and smaller, short lengths of chain.

When that was done, I used the torch and heated each ring red hot in one spot and Will quickly grabbed it with lockjaws and slid a piece of steel under the union. With a 3-pound hand sledge, he quickly beat the ring closed. This took a while as there were a lot of rings down each long side of each tire chain! After this was finished, he used his wire-feed welder to weld each ring closed. He also had to manufacture an extra cross-length so there wouldn’t be a gap where the two ends of the chain met.

Heating-ring

Will-chains

Today, the tractor is proudly wearing two sets of not-so-pricey tire chains and we’re wearing smiles. The Hulk won’t be stuck on slippery ground again, making our tractor much more useful around the homestead!

Will priced a set of tractor chains last night on Craigslist for $400, used, that would have fit. But for less than half, we’re happy. Making things work is one of the most valuable homestead skills! — Jackie

7 COMMENTS

  1. My hubby had to remake some tractor tire chains this winter as well, he had to cut them down, but I had to help as well. It involved a welding torch to heat etc. Love living frugally :)

  2. Always a pleasure reading about your adventures, Jackie! Those junk piles most of us have are priceless for the make-do projects!

  3. bobster,

    Yeah, we know. Will’s going to make wheel weights for the back tires as we often are using the 3 point to move round bales while we also haul one with the front end spear. With a 1,500 pound round bale on the back and those tire chains on, The Hulk will go anywhere. Even without the bale, Will tested it yesterday and was able to drive through 4′ deep snowplow berms and out into the woods where there’s 3′ of snow. Worked great!

  4. what you really need is weight on the back end. gotta make a weight bucket for the 3 point hitch. will make a huge difference. especially necessary when there is a load in the bucket, which further lightens the back end.

Comments are closed.