Leaky Tire

   / Leaky Tire #1  

rScotty

Super Member
Joined
Apr 21, 2001
Messages
9,573
Location
Rural mountains - Colorado
Tractor
Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
One of my rear tires - 19.5Lx24 - takes a month or two, but will always end up about two psi less than the other. Then I fill it up and some months later it is lower again.

But this morning I went out and that tire was FLAT. The tires are in good shape, tubeless, and wheels are good. I cannot find the leak

What would you do? I'm thinking of calling the tire service guys, but that's a two hour round trip.
 
   / Leaky Tire #2  
One of my rear tires - 19.5Lx24 - takes a month or two, but will always end up about two psi less than the other. Then I fill it up and some months later it is lower again.

But this morning I went out and that tire was FLAT. The tires are in good shape, tubeless, and wheels are good. I cannot find the leak

What would you do? I'm thinking of calling the tire service guys, but that's a two hour round trip.

Can you put the tire on a small flat bed trailer or get it in the bed of a pickup? Then find a tire shop that also does Ag too.

I have Broadhead Tire some 12 miles from me. A leaking bead was my trouble. The shop had some 'redish-pink' stuff to coat the inside rim lip that seemed like green slime in a way. This revitalized the tire bead and sealed. I'm going on a year now, it's holding the same PSI since it was filled.

PS, come to think more about it, maybe it was reddish RTV. I don't recall. But, whatever it is, it's also used on aircraft landing tires as well.
 
   / Leaky Tire #3  
Slime worked wonders on my Kubota fronts. Foam filled the rears.
 
   / Leaky Tire #4  
Put some dish soap around the valve stem. Tubeless Shraeder valves can leak at the rim after a while. Wiggle it around a bit. Include the valve area with soap, too.
 
   / Leaky Tire #5  
Put some dish soap around the valve stem. Tubeless Shraeder valves can leak at the rim after a while. Wiggle it around a bit. Include the valve area with soap, too.
Yep. Thats it!
 
   / Leaky Tire #6  
One of my rear tires - 19.5Lx24 - takes a month or two, but will always end up about two psi less than the other. Then I fill it up and some months later it is lower again.

But this morning I went out and that tire was FLAT. The tires are in good shape, tubeless, and wheels are good. I cannot find the leak

What would you do? I'm thinking of calling the tire service guys, but that's a two hour round trip.
What would I do???? I'd get it fixed unless i didn't need to use the tractor. Otherwise I'd just FORGETABOUTIT.
 
   / Leaky Tire
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Put some dish soap around the valve stem. Tubeless Shraeder valves can leak at the rim after a while. Wiggle it around a bit. Include the valve area with soap, too.

I'll give that valve stem a look tomorrow. Good idea.
That's the kind of thought I was hoping for. It just doesn't seem like a normal puncture; I aired it up today and it is holding. That's not right......

If it comes to taking the wheel off, I
doubt that I'll wrestle it on & off by myself.
Not only is it heavy, each of those 8 lug bolts call for 365 ft*lbs of torque. ugh.
rScotty
 
   / Leaky Tire #8  
A quick fix is sometimes possible with a metal valve stem cap...

The cap prevents loss from leaking schrader core.
 
   / Leaky Tire #9  
I'd check the valve stem. We check all our machines before use anyway.
 
   / Leaky Tire #10  
I'll give that valve stem a look tomorrow. Good idea.
That's the kind of thought I was hoping for. It just doesn't seem like a normal puncture; I aired it up today and it is holding. That's not right......

If it comes to taking the wheel off, I
doubt that I'll wrestle it on & off by myself.
Not only is it heavy, each of those 8 lug bolts call for 365 ft*lbs of torque. ugh.
rScotty

365ft-lbs. Yes. I finger tighten till snug, then hit the lug bolts with the impact on setting-1. Work my way in criss-cross fashion. Then hit them on setting-2 likewise. This gets it very close to that range.

IF these are not tightened enough, over time, they loosen and fall off. I wonder why I know about this? LOL. And they are not any certain bolt either. They are metric lug bolts. To keep them from coming off so easy as 365ft-lbs is a chore to reach, I improvised using Nord-Lock washers just under the bolt heads. This is like using lock-tite. ;)

1637729036914.png
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2000 Kenworth W900 - 3406E CAT Engine - 78,980 Miles (A52748)
2000 Kenworth W900...
Electric Mobility Scooter (A51694)
Electric Mobility...
2011 TRAIL KING LOWBOY TRAILER (A50459)
2011 TRAIL KING...
2010 PETERBILT 387 TANDEM AXLE SLEEPER TRUCK (A52576)
2010 PETERBILT 387...
2007 International 7600 Tandem Truck, VIN # 1HSWYAHR37J478209 (A51572)
2007 International...
2007 Chevrolet C4500 4x4 Dump Truck, VIN # 1GBE4C3247F411826 (A51572)
2007 Chevrolet...
 
Top