[AT] RE: Tubes and tires/fixes / barnyard repair
John Hall
jthall at worldnet.att.net
Tue Aug 29 18:27:46 PDT 2006
My uncle once told me of lacing tires with rawhide or rope. I bought an ID-9
IH that was used as a powerplant on a sawmill. One of the rear tires had
been laced together with nylon rope. I guess the owners figured since they
weren't going to drive it there was no need of buying a tire.
John Hall
----- Original Message -----
From: "charlie hill" <chill8 at cox.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2006 6:36 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] RE: Tubes and tires/fixes / barnyard repair
> When I was a small boy my dad was still running his service station and
> had a tennant farmer family doing the farming. They had an early model
> Allis B that they called Allis Mae. She had a cut about, as I remember, 8
> to 10 inches long between two of the lugs on the tire and running at about
> the same angle as the lugs. They had gone inside the tire and bolted
> another piece of rubber under the cut with carriage bolts with the heads
> inside the tire. They were small carriage bolts, maybe 1/4" or slightly
> larger and they were on about 1" centers all the way around the cut and
> about 1" or so out from it.
> Then they had laced the edges of the cut together with a couple of
> strands of bailing wire the same way you would lace your shoes. As far as
> I know that tire was still on old Allis Mae when she left the farm after
> my dad sold the station and took up the farming.
>
> Charlie
>
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