montelatici
Platinum Member
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Well, you are getting pretty close on some of those you list. BTW, there is some good stuff for the DIY grunts in this thread.
Yes, using a ratcheting tie down to get the tire on the bead is a great idea. Thanks.
:
Well, you are getting pretty close on some of those you list. BTW, there is some good stuff for the DIY grunts in this thread.
Yes, using a ratcheting tie down to get the tire on the bead is a great idea. Thanks.
I also use straps when doing tires (when needed). It can be a little freaky because if it were to give, it would slice you in half..
That slick stuff works good, but so does just a plain spray bottle of soapy water (which can be used for detecting leaks too). I even used KY jelly once when mounting tires an that works almost TOO good.
Yes, using a ratcheting tie down to get the tire on the bead is a great idea. Thanks.
This interesting also if you have a flat floor
YouTube - HD22-26 Clever Lever by Tire Service Equipment www.tsissg.com
I even used KY jelly once when mounting tires an that works almost TOO good.
Congrats on your repair. Yep, keeping sufficient air in front tires is useful....and easy to miss when they are low.....I filled my FEL with dirt, looked at the front tires, discovered they were almost riding on the rim and then aired them to the max recommended. Have heard of several TBN'ers who didn't happen to notice and rolled the tire off the rim, as you did...Glad it went back together for you... I predict you will love your new tractor.:thumbsup:
And, yep, I got my tire irons from Harbor Freight...pretty cheap iron and never know when you will need them.
Drat, I had a flat on my M8540 today, stick hit the valve stem. I was surprised it didn't have the same kind of valve stem protection as my L5030.
I've got a slow leaker on my M8540. Noticed it when I got back from a week long vacation. It had about 5psi in it.
Filled it up with my air compressor about two weeks ago and it "looks" OK still. I need to measure the pressure to see how low it really is though. I have industrial tires and the front ones are really stiff. The pressure has to get real low before you will notice it without a full bucket.
I have been knocking down a ton of locust trees in my field. LOTS of thorns. All of my tires have thousands of broken off thorns in them -- looks like little brown circles everywhere!
I am pretty excited that I haven't had more problems. Those R4s are pretty tough!
Hey, guys, here is a tip for seating a tire bead.
remove the valve from the valve stem.
Take the end of your compressor air hose with nothing in the female end and push it onto the valve stem.
The valve stem pushes the air valve in the hose female fitting in and a very large volume of air rushes into the valve stem quickly seating the tire bead.
Sometimes setting the wheel on a pail or 30 gallon drum allows getting the bottom tire bead sitting on the rim. This as well as ussing a ratchet strap around the circumfrence of the tire will help the seating process too.
I use the air chuck / valve stem method all the time. it works like a charm.
Safety note, make sure to remove the air chuck from the valve stem immediately after the bead seats. Reinstall the valve and air up the tire as you would normally, paying attention to appropriate tire pressure.
next time raise the tractor up spray some wd 40 inside the wheel toss a match in the general area and boom the tire is seated . tried it myself works every time butit will scare the ------- out of ya