TTTTTT
Gold Member
I tipped mine a few years ago and that is the first thing I did. Heres a copy from another site detailing it
Tipover
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/safety/145119-big-flip.html
Start after Tipover
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/chinese-tractors/145120-df354-starting-after-big-flip.html
Tire positions

After the Big Flip and then the Big Start..........now its the New Stance.
I decided this would be my first change after getting my tractor back up and running. A fairly quick and straight forward procedure depending on which setting (rear width) you want to choose.
The Fronts
Before

After
Closeup
Very easy.
List
1. Find level ground
2. Block rear wheels
3. Use loader (if equipped) to raise front end. Use jack stands or similar (I used 15" dia. logs cut at correct height). Very solid
4. Remove tires, swap left to right, and flip so concave side out
A few front end pics.

The Rears
Before

After Note: It may look as if the right wheel is not the same distance out as the left. I had to take a second look until I realized when I flipped the tractor, the right fender bracket got bent in, so the wheel appears to be further out by about an inch.

The most important tool!!!! (from another forum somewhere- can't take credit for it)

A long handled shovel makes the job of lifting the large rears that inch or so to get the right position. You can step on the handle nicely lifting it in place as you push it on and taking them off.
I used the second from widest position as they lined up with the fronts nicely and I didn't have to swap left for right. I simply removed the inner rim turned it around (concave out) and reinstalled. The inner rim has the welded attached spots (Not sure the right name) toward the out side. To have them more to the inside, the tire must be flipped and then moved to the other side. This would widen them even further. I wanted a compromise so it would still fit on my trailer.
Left Wide - Right Narrow

The new look is quite nice, a little bolder. Better yet noticeably more stable. Very reassuring when operating, although can never replace common sense.
The Final View

Enjoy Dave
Tipover
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/safety/145119-big-flip.html
Start after Tipover
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/chinese-tractors/145120-df354-starting-after-big-flip.html
Tire positions

After the Big Flip and then the Big Start..........now its the New Stance.
I decided this would be my first change after getting my tractor back up and running. A fairly quick and straight forward procedure depending on which setting (rear width) you want to choose.
The Fronts
Before

After


Very easy.
List
1. Find level ground
2. Block rear wheels
3. Use loader (if equipped) to raise front end. Use jack stands or similar (I used 15" dia. logs cut at correct height). Very solid
4. Remove tires, swap left to right, and flip so concave side out
A few front end pics.


The Rears
Before

After Note: It may look as if the right wheel is not the same distance out as the left. I had to take a second look until I realized when I flipped the tractor, the right fender bracket got bent in, so the wheel appears to be further out by about an inch.

The most important tool!!!! (from another forum somewhere- can't take credit for it)

A long handled shovel makes the job of lifting the large rears that inch or so to get the right position. You can step on the handle nicely lifting it in place as you push it on and taking them off.
I used the second from widest position as they lined up with the fronts nicely and I didn't have to swap left for right. I simply removed the inner rim turned it around (concave out) and reinstalled. The inner rim has the welded attached spots (Not sure the right name) toward the out side. To have them more to the inside, the tire must be flipped and then moved to the other side. This would widen them even further. I wanted a compromise so it would still fit on my trailer.
Left Wide - Right Narrow


The new look is quite nice, a little bolder. Better yet noticeably more stable. Very reassuring when operating, although can never replace common sense.
The Final View

Enjoy Dave