Boondox
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 3,871
- Location
- Craftsbury Common, Vermont
- Tractor
- Deere 4044R cab, Kubota KX-121-3S
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Wet clay will fill up R4s in a hurry. But they are a good compramise tire if the tractor is also going to be used on the lawn as well as off the lawn.
My experience with ag tires is limited to antique tractors, but R1s will self clean in mud, snow and clay, but they tear up a lawn in a hurry.
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Bob -- I run loaded R1s on my L3010. Unless the ground is very wet or I'm making wicked sharp turns in 4WD while using my finish mower, the ags hardly leave a mark on the lawn. Of course, with the wider footprint R4s could do the job earlier, i.e., with R4s I wouldn't have to wait that extra week in spring for the ground to dry out, but personal experience tells me the blanket statement that aggies tear up lawn is not entirely true.
Regards, Pete
My experience with ag tires is limited to antique tractors, but R1s will self clean in mud, snow and clay, but they tear up a lawn in a hurry.
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Bob -- I run loaded R1s on my L3010. Unless the ground is very wet or I'm making wicked sharp turns in 4WD while using my finish mower, the ags hardly leave a mark on the lawn. Of course, with the wider footprint R4s could do the job earlier, i.e., with R4s I wouldn't have to wait that extra week in spring for the ground to dry out, but personal experience tells me the blanket statement that aggies tear up lawn is not entirely true.
Regards, Pete