Henro
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2003
- Messages
- 4,982
- Location
- Few miles north of Pgh, PA
- Tractor
- Kubota B2910, BX2200, KX41-2V mini EX
Just a couple random thoughts that I think relate to this thread... /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
Foam filling: I bought a set of bar tires for my BX yesterday, and dropped the fronts off today for foam filling. Cost is $38 per tire. I think that is fair...but the rears would have been something like $115 each...so I passed on them and will liquid fill them myself. I just could not bite the bullet and spend as much as the four tires and wheels cost for the foam...
If you do buy something other than factory spec, it would be wise to do a test when they are mounted to ensure that you still have a percentage of overspeed on the front. Either the Goodyear or Firestone sites have a write up on how to do it...you might want to check.
But essentially what they say is to pick a flat spot on dirt, where you can run a while, enough to get at least ten revolutions of the back tire if I remember right.
Before you start, you mark the back and front tire with something. THen you run the tractor in 2wd, for ten turns of the back tire, while a helper is counting the revolutions of the front tire. This gives you a baseline.
Then you do the same thing again, second time in 4wd, and you better have more turns of the front tire, for the same ten turns of the back tire. THis indicates you have a percentage of overspeed on the front, which is what you want.
If you don't have overspeed on the front, you need to get the proper tire size...
This is simplistic but basically what the site I am remembering said. You want overspeed on the front...
Foam filling: I bought a set of bar tires for my BX yesterday, and dropped the fronts off today for foam filling. Cost is $38 per tire. I think that is fair...but the rears would have been something like $115 each...so I passed on them and will liquid fill them myself. I just could not bite the bullet and spend as much as the four tires and wheels cost for the foam...
If you do buy something other than factory spec, it would be wise to do a test when they are mounted to ensure that you still have a percentage of overspeed on the front. Either the Goodyear or Firestone sites have a write up on how to do it...you might want to check.
But essentially what they say is to pick a flat spot on dirt, where you can run a while, enough to get at least ten revolutions of the back tire if I remember right.
Before you start, you mark the back and front tire with something. THen you run the tractor in 2wd, for ten turns of the back tire, while a helper is counting the revolutions of the front tire. This gives you a baseline.
Then you do the same thing again, second time in 4wd, and you better have more turns of the front tire, for the same ten turns of the back tire. THis indicates you have a percentage of overspeed on the front, which is what you want.
If you don't have overspeed on the front, you need to get the proper tire size...
This is simplistic but basically what the site I am remembering said. You want overspeed on the front...