freedomeagle
New member
Went out today to do some work with my B3200. It was parked in a bunch of leaves so I didn't notice right rear tire flat. As soon as I started to move it, I could tell something was wrong and then I heard the rim spinning inside the tire. I don't know how much of the liquid fill I lost but I think a good bit. I jacked it up, ratcheted a strap around it to make it re-seat as I filled it with air. I filled it up to about 15lbs and it seems to be holding steady but really won't know until the AM. I'm not really sure why it went flat in the first place. I didn't see anything that looked like a puncture on the tire but I did see some air seeping out around the rim as I was filling it up.
This is my first tractor and although I've had it going on five years now, I have never experienced a flat tire so I have a couple of questions.
Again, I am not sure what caused the flat so I will try to determine that first. If I need to have it repaired, it will cost $277 onsite versus $115 if I take it in. My first question is how much will it weigh once its repaired and the fluid is added back to it. I'm a little worried as to whether I can handle the weight alone. When I called the Ag tire place, their quote includes a tube. That sounds odd to me. Do you put a tube in a rear tractor tire? If so, how do they fill it back with fluid if it has a tube in it? Seems to me that having gone five years without a tube, adding a tube would just be a PIA down the road? But again, I'm not the expert.
Would appreciate any input on both is changing the rear tire doable for one person? Is there something I might be able to do onsite if its just a leak around the rim or a small puncture? And finally, if I have it repaired, should there be a tube?
This is my first tractor and although I've had it going on five years now, I have never experienced a flat tire so I have a couple of questions.
Again, I am not sure what caused the flat so I will try to determine that first. If I need to have it repaired, it will cost $277 onsite versus $115 if I take it in. My first question is how much will it weigh once its repaired and the fluid is added back to it. I'm a little worried as to whether I can handle the weight alone. When I called the Ag tire place, their quote includes a tube. That sounds odd to me. Do you put a tube in a rear tractor tire? If so, how do they fill it back with fluid if it has a tube in it? Seems to me that having gone five years without a tube, adding a tube would just be a PIA down the road? But again, I'm not the expert.
Would appreciate any input on both is changing the rear tire doable for one person? Is there something I might be able to do onsite if its just a leak around the rim or a small puncture? And finally, if I have it repaired, should there be a tube?