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Old 03-22-2021, 07:48 AM   #26
steiny93
Montana Fan
 
Join Date: May 2015
Location: fargo
Posts: 185
M.O.C. #17461
To the original poster

Towing and chains, (keeping in mind you are going to be driving less then 30mph). Chains on the rear axle of the pickup will enable you to start and stop the pickup but the 5er can come around. Chains on the front axle of the pickup will help with steering (but you tend to not really need it due to the slow speeds). The trailer chains will be the ones that save you from disaster (trailer coming around).

All great advice about sitting the weather out, not being in the mess is the best option.

I've run chains on duals and singles; they are a beast but they destroy everything they come in contact with. In my area we don't have mountains so the problem is deep snow and ice; we typically don't chain the trailers but if you have hills it's a different issue. I try not to chain the front axle unless required only due to trying to limit the potential for damage (when a chain comes loose).

Summary,
The more axles with chains the more capability and the more potential for damage. Go slow, take your time. Not being in the mess is the easiest approach.
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