m5040
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2008
- Messages
- 989
- Location
- CT
- Tractor
- Kubota M6040 L2250, JohnDeere 310D, Ford 841 Elenco, Ford 961, Trapmaster, PT180 w/LM bucket and 45" brush cutter, PT1430 Deutz w/grapple bucket, Antonio Carraro Tigrecar 6500. John Deere 5300. Former owned Steiner 430 max, Goldoni REV Maxter 7
Well I started a job on a fairly steep hill and was very disappointed in how easily the 1460 spun the wheels and soon couldn't move up the hill. Went to get a tractor with a log winch and ran out of fuel, gage doesn't go below 1/4, guess it was one of those days.
Anyway when I got the 1460 back into the shop, I checked the tire pressure. 12x16.5, 10 ply with 40 psi and a 5,500 lb load rating. So one tire could carry the complete tractor.
I took out the valve core on a rear tire, as they have the most load when the loader is empty, and watched for sidewall bulge. When I thought it looked good, I put the core back in and measure 8 psi. Far cry from 40.
I went and got a 2,000 lb weight and did the same with the front, found they looked good at 15 psi.
Tried the 1460 back at the hill and it was a completely different tractor. Did the whole job without getting stuck and it rides better now too.
Why they send them out with 40 psi is beyond me.
Anyway when I got the 1460 back into the shop, I checked the tire pressure. 12x16.5, 10 ply with 40 psi and a 5,500 lb load rating. So one tire could carry the complete tractor.
I took out the valve core on a rear tire, as they have the most load when the loader is empty, and watched for sidewall bulge. When I thought it looked good, I put the core back in and measure 8 psi. Far cry from 40.
I went and got a 2,000 lb weight and did the same with the front, found they looked good at 15 psi.
Tried the 1460 back at the hill and it was a completely different tractor. Did the whole job without getting stuck and it rides better now too.
Why they send them out with 40 psi is beyond me.