[AT] How to seat the bead on lawn tractor tires?
Larry D. Goss
rlgoss at evansville.net
Sun Jul 25 14:54:55 PDT 2004
I used to have those problems before I discovered that bead sealer takes
most of the work out of that job. On occasion, I need to use some sort
of rope or ratchet hold down or what have you to expand the bead a bit,
but the liquid bead sealer bridges across the gap well enough that I
just don't seem to have to fight that problem any more. Maybe I've just
been lucky.
Larry
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
[mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of Matthew
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 7:57 AM
To: at at lists.antique-tractor.com
Subject: [AT] How to seat the bead on lawn tractor tires?
I just got a pair of old lawn tractors (Ariens Emperors) and the tires
are
pretty dry rotted on them. These things are built solid as a rock so I
am
in the process of restoring them back to running condition.
I put a new rear tire on one of them, and it turned out to be a most of
the
afternoon project. Getting the old tire off, and the new one on was
easy
enough. Getting the bead started was the fly in the ointment.
I started with crossing my fingers and hoping that my compressor would
blast it hard enough to get both sides to catch. Not a chance.
Next, I tried a ratcheting tie down around the center to pull the beads
out.
This looked like it was going to work, but you reach a point (before the
bead starts to catch) where pulling the center in starts to pull the
beads
in too.
Next, the pyro in me came out and I tried the gas trick. I have had
good
results with this on car and cycle tires, but there is something bout
the
fat little tires that keeps it from getting a good pop..
I resorted to beating on it with a mallet for a while. It did no good,
but
I got some aggression out.
In the end I got it, with a rope around it, and a bunch of sticks to
twist
the rope with. As soon as the bead would start to cave in someplace, I
would
loosen the whole thing up and stick a stick in that place and start
over. 3
or 4 sticks later and I was able to get just enough air in to get it to
seat.
Once it is that far, you are home, but what a long, drawn out trip it
was. Is
there an easier way to get these things to seat?
--Matthew
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