Ballast Water in tires

   / Water in tires #1  

chiefcook

Silver Member
Joined
May 24, 2010
Messages
117
Location
Ashdown, AR
Tractor
LS XG3025 Shuttle
Is it safe if water freezes in tires if tractor is not moved until it thaws?
 
   / Water in tires #2  
I am in Texas and tires have water with mix of slime in them, not intentional. I致e yet to have tires freez. Wish I could answer with experience.
 
   / Water in tires #3  
The dealer said that my tires were filled with a solution that would not freeze down to -30 degrees. It never gets that cold here.
 
   / Water in tires #4  
Is it safe if water freezes in tires if tractor is not moved until it thaws?
water will rust out your rims!. as far as water freezing, it depends on how much water is in the tires, if there is enough room for expansion, then nothing will be damaged, except for the rusting out rims..
 
   / Water in tires #5  
I would guess it's safe.
The usual danger of freezing water is that it expands and this expansion can exert a tremendous force. When in a closed pipe, this expansion force is enough to split the pipe or whatever weak spot is in the system. (Why you should let a faucet drip if its in danger of freezing. Well, that and the water is moving )
I would think that in a tire, that has enough air above the liquid/ice (assume <3/4 of the tire is filled), that just before freezing the water gets more dense and the tire pressure goes down, then when it turns to ice it expands (up to 9%) and the tire pressure goes up.
Because the pressure decreases before it goes back up I don't know if the pressure would be any higher than (say) an 80 degree day. Others may know.
 
   / Water in tires #6  
Just a passing thought........ If there was not the possibility of the "water in tires" causing damage - - then why do all of us in the northern climes use some type of anti-freeze if we fill our tires.
 
   / Water in tires #7  
I'd expect freezing water to stress a tire 'locally' and damage the carcass, but not by imagined 'overpressure'.

That said, we in the North may prefer 'Rim Guard', but at a cost only of some density/weight no one had ever made a good case against windshield washer fluid as insurance in climates where freezing conditions are rare.
 
   / Water in tires #8  
Just a passing thought........ If there was not the possibility of the "water in tires" causing damage - - then why do all of us in the northern climes use some type of anti-freeze if we fill our tires.
2 reasons, it's not water, which rusts your rims, and you can use your tractor in freezing cold weather without cracking your tires..
 
   / Water in tires #9  
I would guess that if I had to - I could use something other than Rim Guard. However - the added weight over some other type of antifreeze is cheap ballast.
 
   / Water in tires #10  
I would guess that if I had to - I could use something other than Rim Guard. However - the added weight over some other type of antifreeze is cheap ballast.
just don't use oil, it can soften and dissolve rubber and plastic..
 

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