[AT] Patching Rear Tire on Tractor?
william.neff.powell at comcast.net
william.neff.powell at comcast.net
Wed Jun 25 03:07:37 PDT 2008
My expandable bladder was a rope tied around the tire that I would twist tight with a tire iron....
I had a little Sayer Bell compressor that would chug for about 15 minutes before I had enough pressure, if I was lucky the bead would seal... If not, I had to drive to the local service station where they had some real air pressure.
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: Larry Goss <rlgoss at insightbb.com>
> There is no list of ingredients on the side of the can, Roy, but I suspect it's
> mostly rubber cement. It smells like it, and it does an excellent job at
> sealing the bead when you are initially airing up a tire. These Chinese utility
> tires on wheel barrows, garden carts, warehouse trucks, etc, that are such a
> pain to put air into when the seal breaks at the bead, are a snap with the tire
> bead sealer. My neighbor fought the tires on his brand new garden cart last
> fall for nearly an hour without success. One was absolutely flat when he
> unpacked it, and the other showed no pressure reading. A liberal application of
> the bead sealer made it possible to seat the bead of the tire without the
> expandable bladder that used to be standard equipment in every tire shop. The
> bladder was wrapped around the perimeter of the tire and aired up to compress
> the tread and spread the bead out to the edge of the rim so it would seal the
> big gap around the tire and start holding air.
>
> There I go again showing my age. Several on this list remember those expanders.
> The younger ones are saying, "What?"
>
> Larry
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Roy Morgan <k1lky at earthlink.net>
> Date: Tuesday, June 24, 2008 13:42
> Subject: Re: [AT] Patching Rear Tire on Tractor?
> To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>
> >
> > On Jun 24, 2008, at 3:06 PM, Larry Goss wrote:
> >
> > > I have worn out the rubber cushion t...- too many other things
> > going
> > > on to dedicate any permanent space to a tire changer.
> >
> > My shop will likely be the same.
> >
> > > No. That green stuff is called, "Slime". IMHO, it should
> > never be
> > > used -- unless you have to work in an area that has Black
> > Locust
> > > trees.
> >
> > Because the Locust trees are full of thorns? BIG
> > thorns? I have a
> > couple here about an inch thick and 8 feet tall.
> > Unfortunately, they
> > are likely to succumb to a burn I need to do at their feet in a ditch.
> >
> > > The product I am referring to is basically black rubber
> > cement.
> > Is it mostly cement, or partly lubricant? I remember the
> > local garage
> > used soapy water or some such in a small bucket near the
> > tire
> > changer. Maybe it was not that at all but it did
> > make bubbles where
> > there was a leak. They also had a Tungar battery
> > charger. I have one
> > also and maybe it's ideal to use on my 6 volt McCormick!
> > Of course it
> > would have to be overhauled first.
> >
> > > ... a quart of it with a built-in applicator brush ... below
> > half full
> >
> > Maybe there is some solvent or the like you could add to the stuff.
> >
> > Roy
> >
> > Roy Morgan
> > k1lky at earthlink.net
> > Lovettsville, VA 20180
> >
> >
> >
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