Ditto on the skinny tires for snow. My 11.00/20 NDT's will easily maintain traction in 12" - 16" fine powder and will absolutely not tread-fill. I ran these wheels and tires for 10 years on a 1985 1-ton K30 single-rear-wheel civilian truck and enjoyed outstanding traction in deep snow. In 1993 we had 20" snow here in Kentucky and this tire and wheel was the only thing moving on the road. I spent 2 days delivering groceries to church members and hauling hay to cows.
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Those tires would have you in the ditch every single storm here in the mountains of Colorado. I mean the mountains, not Denver.
NDT's can spin through a bunch, but you wouldn't make it 5 miles here, even fully locked up. Crappy tires for anything but plowing straight.
Try a few passes in ice/slush on top of 8" with 3k vert on a regular basis for 6 months. Oh wait, you couldn't without chains. Or even better, the next 4 days with 4" of packed pure ice that glows back at you in yellow and grey.
Want a tire that performs in the snow, get a dedicated snow tire. I've seen FWD civics with blizzacks or hakk's blow the tails off of rigs like that. Nice look, but absolutely impractical in real severe persistent winter conditions.
****, I wouldn't even take the deuce out in the snow with the ss michelans over my 1028 with dedicated snows. Know what it's like coming down a pass in a whiteout on ice and packed snow without real tires? Those are my normal conditions.
Get a grip. BFG's suck in the nasty too. First 10k, maybe you'll stay on the road, but they harden after that.
Why do you think everyone here either runs plow rigs or Audi's and Subies?
We had 10" yesterday, and it all turned to ice. And it's only November. Try coming down the hill from the PO with NDT's and you are wrecking everytime. That's just a side street to a state highway.