I'm not sure airing down your tires would help in snow, usually you want a smaller contact patch (in the form of a narrower tire) for snow as it cuts through to pavement better than a wide tire which would float on the snow.
I've also found with my selectrac KJ and previously with a TOD (fulltime) Isuzu that fulltime 4wd can make snow driving easier if there is a lot of cornering. The trouble in corners and part time is that if you are spinning all 4 tires the fronts will skid through the turns. When in full time they can bite a little better if they aren't being spun. It's the same principle as gassing your front wheel drive car in a turn in snow, it goes straight ahead. Also when decelerating suddenly all 4 lock up easily due to engine braking and you lose steering. A clutch is a good thing to have in that case. It is diffucult to control wheelspin and skid in snow with an auto tranny. I even put it in neutral sometimes when descending steep snowy hills and use my brakes for wheel control as engine braking can be too powerfull when finesse is required.
Traction control and esp systems don't always work well in snow and 4wd either because they sense a difference in speed between tires to detect traction loss and if all 4 are skidding or spinning at the same rate the computer thinks all is well.
I have gotten used to running in fulltime for normal snow driving and parttime only when it gets really deep and then I take it easy. When snowy weather hits here I usually leave it in fulltime until the roads clear off. Sometimes I put it in parttime before I pull in the driveway so I can be sure I will get out the next day. 4wd won't engage after you're stuck in a KJ. What you don't want to do is make sharp turning manuevers on dry pavement in parttime, running over dry patches of a snowy wet highway isn't going to hurt you.
Now, would you please send some of that snow up my way??
