good snow tires

NOVIS

New Member
Apr 22, 2009
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little hick town in Ontario, Canada
i got 18" razrs on right now. love them in summer hate them in winter. what are some good tires for riden is snow. i dont want them huge though cuz then it looks like crap IMO. i saw some at canadian tire for pretty cheap. they are called trail wolf. anyone have experience with these in snow. just want some ideas or suggestions thanks
 
I know this isn't what your looking for but my old swampers kicked ass in the snow.. never tried them with my blaster though.....I don't know if you can even get them anymore lol.

I would personally get stockers and stud them, or if you have some cash to spend bear claws are a great choice too. You would probobly want to drop 1 or maybe even 2 teeth up front.
 
4snows are killer for sure, for a cheap tire my fast ttrekkers have been working kick ass in the snow, they have that little paddle in the middle and it works good.
 
I know this isn't what your looking for but my old swampers kicked ass in the snow.. never tried them with my blaster though.....I don't know if you can even get them anymore lol.

I would personally get stockers and stud them, or if you have some cash to spend bear claws are a great choice too. You would probobly want to drop 1 or maybe even 2 teeth up front.

i was hoping to get a set of swampers on banshee rims for 50 bucks. but the guy originally wanted 100 so he said no. and u really think the stock tires would do good in snow? cuz i still have my them layin around somewhere
 
The stockers aren't bad in the snow. They work great on the ice too when studded up.

Mud Lites rock in the snow, as will just about any mud tire.

Holeshot/Razr style tires are not that great in the snow. It's not that they're bad tires, they're just not made for it. holeshot/razr style tires in the snow is like running a street performance tire on a truck in the snow....it will go, but not all that well.


Also, the taller the tire the better it will be in the snow because it will keep your undercarriage from dragging. Tall skinny is best, but any paddlish/mud tire will do the trick.