Originally Posted By: Drew99GT
Originally Posted By: 2010_FX4
Many thanks all for the information! We travel very frequently to Colorado and although we have not had to have chains as yet (either conditions were not bad enough or we had not gone into an area that required them), I was curious as to how they change the driving characteristics of a vehicle--particularly the ride.
The only real pass that we would cross is Raton and that one is either maintained enough not to need chains or it is closed (have never seen an in between traveling through there).
Raton pass can get ugly at times, but it has to be the right kind of storm - ie, storms that come more from the southwest, or strong cold fronts from the north where the northern side gets a lot of snow. However, it's nothing like the passes along the continental divide that routinely get dumped on over the winter.
Regarding Colorado's chain law, if you have snow tires or 4 wheel drive, you don't need chains.
Thanks Drew! It is nice to know this. As much as we go to CO, I should have already checked on it
. We just came back from Estes Park and it was snowing, but luckily not enough for chains and we would not venture too far into potentially dangerous conditions anyway. The snow is a nuisance for all of the folks that live in it, but for us, it was a nice playtime...