Chains, Tyres, and Lockers: Your Ultimate Guide to Icy Trails
Snow & Ice — Part 2 of 3

Chains, Tyres, and Lockers: Your Ultimate Guide to Icy Trails

Land Rover Defender on an icy mountain trail with front chains; focus on chains, tyres, and lockers setup

On winter trails, traction comes from three levers you control: chains (mechanical bite), tyres (compound & tread), and lockers (how torque shares across an axle). Here’s how each works on snow/ice, when to combine them, and how to stay safe on slick descents and off-camber sections.

Tyre chains: instant mechanical bite

Chains turn slick, polished surfaces into something your tyres can “grab.” They shine on ice and hard-packed snow, and can help on steep, refrozen climbs/descents.

When to fit

  • Glare ice, refrozen ruts, steep hardpack.
  • When momentum alone won’t carry a climb safely.
  • Fit before you’re stuck—safe, flat pull-out.

Where to fit

  • Follow your manual. Many rigs: fronts first for steering & braking.
  • For max drive on climbs: fronts (control) + rears (traction) when allowed.

Fit & safety

  • Practice at home with gloves; tarp to kneel on.
  • Tension evenly; drive 100–200 m and re-check.
  • Keep speeds low; remove on bare pavement.

Winter & AT tyres: compound, siping, tread

  • Winter/3PMSF ATs: Softer compounds stay pliable in the cold; dense siping creates micro-edges on ice.
  • Classic mud-terrains: Stiff lugs + fewer sipes; they harden and slide more on ice.
  • Tread depth matters: Shallow tread reduces snow packing/clearing and braking grip.

Bottom line: Expecting regular snow/ice? Run winter-rated rubber (or modern 3PMSF ATs) and add chains when conditions demand.

Lockers on snow & ice: strengths and gotchas

What lockers do well

  • At very low speed they stop the “one-wheel peel,” keeping both axle tyres turning.
  • Great for controlled climbs where one tyre unloads in ruts.

Use with care

  • Locked axles resist turning; a locked front can push wide on slick off-camber turns.
  • Engage to start/finish a move, unlock to steer through bends.

Smart combinations for real trails

  • Hardpack descent: Chains front, 4L, engine braking; lockers off unless needed to keep a straight crawl.
  • Icy climb with ruts: Chains front (rear too if allowed); rear locker for drive; unlock to steer on a sidehill.
  • Deep fresh snow: Lower PSI, maintain flow with winter/AT tyres; save chains for refrozen sections.

Setup & PSI for winter traction

  • PSI starting points: Powder 15–20 psi; packed 18–24 psi; heavy rigs +2–4 psi. Reinflate before highway.
  • Modes & gears: Use “snow/ice” modes; start in a taller gear to soften torque shock.
  • Chain clearance: Verify at full lock and bump; check lines/struts/calipers.

Practice drills (empty snowy lot, 10–20 min)

Chain fit & retension

  1. Fit one axle, drive 100–200 m, re-tension evenly.
  2. Practice removal and stowing with cold gloves.

Locker etiquette

  1. On a gentle incline, climb unlocked → repeat with rear locked.
  2. Unlock before a turn; feel steering difference.

PSI exploration

  1. Run the same loop at 24, 20, then 18 psi; note start/stop distance & steering feel.

Recommended gear for icy trails

Heavy-duty snow chains fitted to an all-terrain tyre

Snow Chains

Maximum bite on ice/hardpack. Practice install at home.

All-terrain tyres with 3PMSF snowflake rating

All-Terrain Tyres (3PMSF)

Cold-weather compound + siping for winter grip.

Aftermarket locking differential unit

Locking Differential

Locks an axle for steady traction at very low speed—use wisely on slick turns.

Bright traction boards with aggressive lugs for snow and sand

Traction Boards

Low-risk self-recovery tool on snow and ice.

Kinetic recovery rope for controlled pulls on slick surfaces

Kinetic Recovery Rope

Elastic stretch for gentler extractions in low traction.

Disclosure: Some links are affiliate links that help fund hands-on testing at no extra cost to you.

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