TRACTOR WEIGHTS

   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #21  
I know someone will squak about this but I filled the front tires of my JD 3320 with Rim Guard. I keep them blown up to the max pressure and have no issues while using the loader. I started doing this back in my antique tractor pulling days when you could only have one set of wheel weights and noting else bolted to the tractor. The John Deere A's and B's were very lite on the front end and needed all the help up front they could get.
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #22  
i added rv antifreeze and water ballast to my front's on that 4600. every little bit helps.

front end coming up ain't fun when driving up the ramps to a tall deck over gooseneck..

soundguy
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #23  
Sguy,
How much weight do you think one can pick on filling the fronts??
I have L3240 with R1- front 7.2-16R1??

AndyG
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #24  
according to my ballast chart, a 7.5-16 holds 9g per tire when filled to 75%.. which is 75# of WATER weight, not including the modifier for whatever ballast you use.

i did not have a listing for a 7.2.. but you can extrapolate from there.

various rim configurations will effect fill rate.. i have seen 70-90% fill based on tube / tire / rim design.

remember.. that is per tire. so at a minimum with 75% water fill.. you gain 150# of rolling weight that really doesn't impact things like wheel bearings and such..

hope that helps.

soundguy
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #25  
yep that does... I have no FEL and at times the 3pt hitch will pick up way more than the front will let it.. I ride around on 2 tires when I move or hook up to heavy implets. The 3240 handles them fine pulling, but going up a incline or onto the trailer makes for FUN!.. I might look into it.. the extra 150lbs might be the ticket. Funny how the one extra weight was noticeable just not quite enough...

AndyG
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #26  
I think the correct way to add weights to a tractor is simply add a piece of railroad track to the front, in whatever lenght you can find or purchase (don't steal them, it makes too big a mess when the train finds the missing section). For larger tractors, stacking tracks a couple high seems to work, or putting them in front of each other. I prefer the bottom to bottom bolted together method.
David from jax


I thought about this, but could not find any RR track at the right point and a buddy at a paper mill said they had the round stock steel so i got it. I now have about a 6 ft piece of RR track but could not find an easy way to cut it. Some said torch others said that wont work, i thought about a gas cutoff saw but id have to rent one for like $40, or pay someone. I wanted cheap so never went the RR track route. That 6 ft piece i have must weight around 300lbs. It may be 5.5 feet?
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #27  
i used a big piece of heavy angle to base my bumper on.. would have loved to find rr track..

soundguy
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #28  
I have about 20 feet of RR track my son is going to cut with his plasma cutter for weights on out tractors and implements. My father in law and I got them when they decommissioned a RR that ran through our property and left them lying in the weeds. I had forgotten all about them as we had put them someplace we would remember.:laughing:
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #29  
sweet.. free metal and all...
 
   / TRACTOR WEIGHTS #30  
sweet.. free metal and all...

We also got the road bed gravel which we shared with a couple of guys to help dig and haul it out. We used it on our roads and a few other places.:thumbsup:

There was also a bridge with some really nice basketball size rocks on each side, several truck loads, that my father in law paid someone to come in and bury. I tried to talk him out of it, but he was determined. He kicked himself later, but it was too late.

We are now buying big rocks to control erosion.:(
 
 
 
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