[AT] Any old farmer tricks for fixing tire leaks?
pga2 at hot1.net
pga2 at hot1.net
Thu Apr 21 05:54:55 PDT 2005
Some time back (more than 5 years) I had a slow leak in a tractor tire.
I bought a gallon of Berrymans Tire Sealer and used that in the front
tire to stop the slow leak. Worked great! I don't remember what it cost,
but it was cheaper than a new tube and the installation. Since then I've
used more of the same gallon on a couple of riding mower tires. Still have
about a half gallon left.
Phil
----- Original Message -----
>From : Brett Phillips <bphillip at shentel.net>
Sent : Wed, 20 Apr 2005 22:23:08 -0400
To : Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-
tractor.com>
Subject : Re: [AT] Any old farmer tricks for fixing tire leaks?
>I've heard that a couple of coats of latex paint on the inside of a tubeless
tire will get you by for a little while... The last time I was in this
position, I put tubes in. You may have to find a good old fashioned tire
shop to find them as cheap as Jim did. TSC has tubes, but they're a little
spendy IMHO.
Brett Phillips
Back to lurking...
----- Original Message -----
From: "Matthew" <matthewx at dogod.com>
To: <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2005 7:19 PM
Subject: [AT] Any old farmer tricks for fixing tire leaks?
> I just picked up a freebie lawn tractor and got it going but the tires
> have some dry rot and leak down over a half hour or so. I have used
> the green slime in other tires before, but they now want like $7 a
> bottle for it. Is there anything else people have used that is
> inexpensive and a more or less a common household item?
>
> --Matthew
>
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