Tires Puddle on the floor from the tires.

   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #1  

RalphVa

Super Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2003
Messages
7,885
Location
Charlottesville, VA, USA
Tractor
JD 2025R, previously Gravely 5650 & JD 4010 & JD 1025R
My wife reported that I had a puddle on the floor around my tractor when she went into the basement of the carriage house to the freezer there.

Sure enough, there was maybe a half gallon of water (no smell) there. Mopped it up and moved the tractor back but positioned the rear wheels about a 1/4 turn up from where they were sitting. No leakage whatsever now.

Anyone experienced this? Pretty sure it came from one of the liquid-filled rear tires on my new JD 4010. Could have possibly gotten a locust thorn in one of them from a little bit of bush hogging a few days before that. A lawn maintenance guy was cutting the neighbor's wild area between there and my property. There were a bunch of locusts in there. I cut some of the grass on my side of the line. May have been some locust branches lying in wait.

The maintenance guy said he had his machine tires all slimed.

Can't slime liquid-filled tires according to the slime site.

How to keep thorns from causing problems? I've had several flats on my Gravely tires with them. The Gravely ones are easy to fix. These big buggers aren't unless I just plug them. Some locust punctures would require some quite small plug equipment. They're hard to find, particularly externally. On the Gravely tires, I could generally only find them by feeling around the inside of the tire. Often I'd have to find the thorn first to locate where the leak would be in the tube.

Experiences? I did a search and found out a bunch of info. No real solid info on exactly how to locate and to plug thorns holes in filled tires though. This COULD possibly be a good reason to remove the filling and add weight on the back, maybe on a KK carryall that I plan to get. Then I could slime the rear tires.

Ralph
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #2  
Could it have been condensation? If you parked it after operating in the cold there is a pretty large thermal mass working there with filled tires.
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #3  
Hi, try rolling the tire back to its original position, 1/4 turn and look for the weeping of fluid. Im opting for rear wheel weights myself. Could it be ice that has melted? I wonder since you say it has no smell. I keep my tractor covered up with a tarp and the bucket got ice in it, dumped it out and its been there for a week. /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #4  
Ralph, the first time I found my tractor sitting it puddles and the tires wet, it worried me, too. But it was just condensation in an uninsulated metal building with a concrete floor; no leaks. Like texbaylea said.
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #5  
Wouldn't his whole tractor cause condensation then? Making a large pool of water?
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #6  
<font color="blue">( Wouldn't his whole tractor cause condensation then?</font>

I'm not well enough qualified to attempt a scientific explanation, but in my case, at least, there was a tiny bit of moisture on a spot or two on the bottom of the tractor; none visible on the top, sides, etc. of the metal, but the tires were sure wet. It definitely surprised me. I was under that thing looking for the leak. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif

Now for somebody with more knowledge than I; my rear tires were completely soaked, but not so much on the front tires. And my rear tires were filled to about 75% with water and antifreeze. Is that what caused the difference? That's what I suspect anyway.
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #7  
Buy a good tire plug kit, the kind with the T handles and get used to using it.

When you turned the tires you probably just moved the leak to where it is above the water level.

You can use a squirt bottle with some diswashing liquid and water in it to find the leak pretty easily.

Bill Tolle
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #8  
It'll be interesting to see. A half gallon is alot of water for condensation. By the way, your in texas, right. (Im getting ready to show my ignorance here. Wisdom says to clear out of this and forget it all) Does it get cold enough down there to make tractors condensate? /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif I know you get the ocasional freak storm and all.
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #9  
Yep, Franz, when it happened to me, I was living 60 miles south of Dallas. We sometimes have some pretty high humidity and I don't remember just how cold it was when it happened. I think I only had it happen 3 or 4 times in 7 years. We don't have a lot of really cold weather, but I know it got down to 10F at least once, and several mornings the rabbits' water bottles would all be frozen and I'd take them in the house to thaw them and refill them.
 
   / Puddle on the floor from the tires. #10  
Thanks Bird. When I think of Texas I see vast areas or warm land and a winter doesnt fit my mind, so its hard for me to imagine it. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

THE ROOTSTER STUMP & ROOT PICKER (A51243)
THE ROOTSTER STUMP...
2015 KENWORTH T370 QUINT AXLE DUMP TRUCK (A51222)
2015 KENWORTH T370...
2007 TRANSCRAFT 48X102 FLATBED (A50854)
2007 TRANSCRAFT...
Gravelly Pro-Turn 148 48in Zero Turn Mower (A48082)
Gravelly Pro-Turn...
2003 Big Tex 10PI 16ft. T/A Pipe Top Utility Trailer (A49461)
2003 Big Tex 10PI...
2000 INTERNATIONAL 4300 17FT ROLLBACK TRUCK (A51222)
2000 INTERNATIONAL...
 
Top