rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,566
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
4get gto:
A lot of people have pointed to some 'other' tires, most now in metric, but I am leery of using something not recommended by Kubota....that Kendra tire205/65-10 is basically a 20 not 21 tire (DML Tire and Wheel Calculator). If this were not a 4WD tractor, I might consider, but until I am sure that it will not damage my tractor, I am going to steer clear. As one user pointed out, a weather checked tire with a tube might last a very long time. As I am not in any hurry, I will continue to investigate.
I've never been able to get technical information or recommendations from Kubota, but I applaud you for trying. When I do get an answer, it's such an elementary level that it's useless to me. I think they need to change, but that's just me. I haven't seen change happening, and they still have grown to dominate the small tractor market .... so from a marketing perspective they are doing everything right.
That DML tire and wheel calculator works fine for iron wheels with iron tires that never change. But it doesn't take into account what we care about in 4wd, which is how the loading on a tire changes its shape so that the rolling circumference changes from simple arithmetic and becomes a function of load, tire pressure, and sidewall elasticity.
In the case of the Kendra metric 205/65-10 tire versus the original Firestone 21-8-10 tire, the Kendra is a more heavily built 12 ply tire with a higher pressure and load rating..... Which means it will deform less than the Firestone So I wouldn't be surprised to find that it is a good match as a replacement tire. I've sent a request to Kendra for the RC spec because unlike Firestone, they don't have that spec on their website. That's not surprising, since you wouldn't need to know for a trailer tire. Anyway, they probably do have the spec, will see what they say if they respond.
But the only real way to know RC for your tractor is to measure the tire in use. In fact, you might want to measure your old Firestones so that you will have the information available. It's easy, and measuring it yourself will tell you how much your RC is different from the stated RC for your tires on the Firestone website. The way I measure the Rolling Circumference is to inflate the front tires normally, put a medium load in the FEL bucket, leave it in 2wd, put a dot of paint on the tread of the front tire... and drive down a paved road in 2wd. Go as straight as you can for 8 or 10 revolutions and then stop and measure the distance between the paint dots your tire has put on the asphalt. Average that distance and that is your Real Rolling Circumference for that tire. That is the number you want to match, and it means more to you than what the tire sidewall numbers say.
good luck,
rScotty