sixdogs
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2007
- Messages
- 13,790
- Location
- Ohio
- Tractor
- Kubota M7040, Kubota MX5100, Deere 790 TLB, Farmall Super C
In your link from post #71 your comment is: the tires were loaded for "a couple of years I was told".
Certainly the seller told you that, and when you drained the WWF, you then assumed that the WWF fluid had caused the wheel corrosion over 2 or 3 years.
My supposition is that someone did load the tires with WWF "a couple of years" prior, but .... prior to that, someone else had kept CaCl in those tires for many additional years.
How old was the tractor when you bought it?
The man who owned it was 96 and passed away suddenly. Note on this is to get a second opinion. He was so meticulous that his shovels and garden tools were wire brushed for the winter and wiped with an oily rag. Magazines back to the 1940's were chronologically categorized.
This was his estate sale and remarks were made that the tractor has been recently "serviced" so in my due diligence I called the dealer. Got a secretary who didn't know much but read me his service card info from the date of purchase (when new) through the last service. I also spoke with the son. That's how I got my dates and feel very confident they are correct. I can smell a rat and am by nature suspicious until proven otherwise. They never had anything but washer fluid in them and in fact, the tires were damaged from spinning prior to the fluid and I had to replace them. He even had the tractor weighed and recorded after filling so I had that as well.
In conversation with the shop that drained them for me, they said everything corroded wheels with some doubts about beet juice. They said wheels with beet juice in them looked like they were sandblasted inside and were shiny steel. Everything else corroded to some degree.
It's all just my two cents here and each of us will do different things. Anything that involves tractors is good; it's just that some is more good than others.