ruffdog
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2011
- Messages
- 10,570
- Location
- southern wisconsin
- Tractor
- Bobcat Toolcat 5610G, Deere X744, Cub Cadet IH 982
Replacing a rubber stem:
Yes it did.I'm thinking that the valve stem is a normal rubber stem like in a car tire? Did the ballast react with the rubber so the brass inner stem detach from the rubber when you turned the cap? If you don't have tubes in your tires, the dealer would easily be able to quickly replace the rubber stems with new quality rubber stems without breaking the tire bead. Some import stems rot and fall apart just from age.
My local tire dealer 5 minutes away fixed all the issues the same day for $300. There is now heavy duty metal valve stems with new ballast. They do all the John Deere, New Holland, and Mahindra dealership tractor tires in the area. The tapered rim prevented recovery of the existing ballast. They saved me 90 minutes of drive time to my LS dealer, and he got me going the day before a major snow storm. The LS dealer wanted several days to fix. I did not want to reward unacceptable behavior. The LS dealer refuses to accept any ownership of the issue.My rear tire lost its bead and now there is rim guard - beet juice everywhere.
I thought to possibly reseat the bead, I would add some air to the tire. When I went to add air, I could not unscrew the cap. After I turned the cap for awhile, the whole assembly pulled out. The assembly is a plastic insert that sticks into a rubber boot from the tire. I attached a picture.
I initially used a rubber tapered tip on the air compressor so I could try to reseat the bead. After adding some air and jiggling the tractor, I do not hear air excaping anymore for the time being.
How do you formally get air into the tire? The air chuck has nothing to grab onto. The LS dealer hired a new guy who knows nothing about this configuration. I am assuming this configuration was done to get the beet juice in the tire.
Can someone please explain the assembly and what keeps it from shooting out of the rubber boot? Also how to get air into the tire?
TIA
Yooper Dave
Did the repair guy change the other rear stem also? Chances are that one will be bad in time also.My local tire dealer 5 minutes away fixed all the issues the same day for $300. There is now heavy duty metal valve stems with new ballast. They do all the John Deere, New Holland, and Mahindra dealership tractor tires in the area. The tapered rim prevented recovery of the existing ballast. They saved me 90 minutes of drive time to my LS dealer, and he got me going the day before a major snow storm. The LS dealer wanted several days to fix. I did not want to reward unacceptable behavior. The LS dealer refuses to accept any ownership of the issue.
He replaced both rear tires stems and ballast. The other rear tire valve stem could also be removed easily by hand. We are supposed to get up to 10" of snow today, and I now feel ready to plow with confidence. BTW I just added a ballast box yesterday so I should have a better configuration for plowing with the bigger bucket.Did the repair guy change the other rear stem also? Chances are that one will be bad in time also.
Did you get some snow up there? We only got about 5" here.He replaced both rear tires stems and ballast. The other rear tire valve stem could also be removed easily by hand. We are supposed to get up to 10" of snow today, and I now feel ready to plow with confidence. BTW I just added a ballast box yesterday so I should have a better configuration for plowing with the bigger bucket.
About the same - 4 to 5 inches.Did you get some snow up there? We only got about 5" here.
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