Rear wheel weights vs filling tires

   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #41  
Not trying to talk you into the liquid route. I understand your reasoning. I had a flat recently but being the cheap skate I am I patched my own tube. I do have tubes. Lot of folks here in east Texas do fill tires. I'm looking for traction and not loader ballast. I never have occasion to use my loader without an implement on the back and my loader stays off my tractor 50% or more of the time. I do gardening and mowing in tight situations and my loader is in the way. Have a quick hitch for implements so can change quickly. I will be interested to see your end result and amount of weight and how you mount it. :thumbsup:
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #42  
I agree. This is the FEL. I use Reg. and knowing what it's capable of, Loosening the dirt with a BB and scooping it up with the Fel. is more realistic for a small compact. Doing any hard soil digging or heavey grading reinforcing it would be good Ins. from hopefully not breaking something on the tractor. I don't believe you have the HP. for that to happen after beefing up the frame like you are planning. And Yes Wheel weights are much easier to deal with ;)

Carey
 

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   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires
  • Thread Starter
#43  
Not trying to talk you into the liquid route. I understand your reasoning. I had a flat recently but being the cheap skate I am I patched my own tube. I do have tubes. Lot of folks here in east Texas do fill tires. I'm looking for traction and not loader ballast. I never have occasion to use my loader without an implement on the back and my loader stays off my tractor 50% or more of the time. I do gardening and mowing in tight situations and my loader is in the way. Have a quick hitch for implements so can change quickly. I will be interested to see your end result and amount of weight and how you mount it. :thumbsup:

I'm kind of the opposite in what I use the tractor for. I built the loader to level high spots that have formed over the years around my place but to do that I have to go a ways from my house to get the dirt I need. Also to clean up about 13 acres of woods so I can start mowing it and make it look nice. I've already found the loader to be handy in pushing small dead trees and scraping up under growth. I doubt the loader will ever come off the tractor unless I need to fix it or modify it. My problem is getting the tractor around through the trees and anything hanging off the back is making it harder to get around. I to just want traction.
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires
  • Thread Starter
#44  
I agree. This is the FEL. I use Reg. and knowing what it's capable of, Loosening the dirt with a BB and scooping it up with the Fel. is more realistic for a small compact. Doing any hard soil digging or heavey grading reinforcing it would be good Ins. from hopefully not breaking something on the tractor. I don't believe you have the HP. for that to happen after beefing up the frame like you are planning. And Yes Wheel weights are much easier to deal with ;)

Carey

Nice looking rig. That is about the size and style I will someday move up to but I won't get rid of the YM1900. My dad gave it to me and my mom still asks how it's doing so I guess it will be with me till either me or it won't go anymore. At the rate the tractor is holding up I think it will be me.

I did manage to hit a buried rock and stopped the tractor dead in it's tracks. No damage to anything but I got very acquainted with the steering wheel:D I was cutting down a high spot with the bucket about 3" in the ground with the differential lock on and a big grin till the rock showed me that was not a particularly bright thing to do:eek: But it was fun:D
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #45  
Nice looking rig. That is about the size and style I will someday move up to but I won't get rid of the YM1900. My dad gave it to me and my mom still asks how it's doing so I guess it will be with me till either me or it won't go anymore. At the rate the tractor is holding up I think it will be me.

I did manage to hit a buried rock and stopped the tractor dead in it's tracks. No damage to anything but I got very acquainted with the steering wheel:D I was cutting down a high spot with the bucket about 3" in the ground with the differential lock on and a big grin till the rock showed me that was not a particularly bright thing to do:eek: But it was fun:D

Hey Gary, You might consider either building or buying a tooth bar for your loader bucket, having teeth on the bucket could really make the job go much smoother.....( Pun intended ) heh heh! :D
I don't have one but sure would like to :thumbsup:
Here is a couple of Pix of my 1700 at work, I use a ground pulverizer for finishing the soil just before seeding, Notice all the small holes made by the pins from the roller, these holes help to retain the seed.;)
 
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   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires
  • Thread Starter
#46  
Hey Gary, You might consider either building or buying a tooth bar for your loader bucket, having teeth on the bucket could really make the job go much smoother.....( Pun intended ) heh heh! :D
I don't have one but sure would like to :thumbsup:
Here is a couple of Pix of my 1700 at work, I use a ground pulverizer for finishing the soil just before seeding, Notice all the small holes made by the pins from the roller, these holes help to retain the seed.;)

You have a much heavier duty loader than what I have. Looks good. What do you use to get the ground so flat? I haven't got the hang of back dragging yet or how to set the bucket just right for the depth I want so I wind up cleaning it up with a rake. Ok for small spots but not for anything bigger.

I do like the pulverizer. Would be nice for a 2 acre field I want to clean up and sow.

I'll look into either buying a tooth bar or making one. I'm thinking making one is one of those jobs I would regret soon after starting.
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #47  
Filled - Guessing about 80lbs per side on 22" tires.

I'm going to guess that adding 160 lbs will not make much difference for you (in a 1500lb? 2000lb? tractor), so even if you did fill the tires, you'd end up adding wheel weights in addition. :)
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #48  
Every pound counts.
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires #49  
Have successfully put 11 gallons of weak antifreeze/water solution in my 8.3-24 rice tires. Will probably be awhile before I have significant test results. This should weigh in at about 92 pounds per tire.
 
   / Rear wheel weights vs filling tires
  • Thread Starter
#50  
I'm going to guess that adding 160 lbs will not make much difference for you (in a 1500lb? 2000lb? tractor), so even if you did fill the tires, you'd end up adding wheel weights in addition. :)

This setup is giving me the balance I need with the loader. I guess I need to take it off and try to weigh it. I don't know how to calculate the added weight it would have hanging off the 3pt. If I can figure out the weight it is giving me, then I should know how much to add to the wheels.
 

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