[AT] Tractor tire liquid
Steve W.
swilliams268 at frontier.com
Mon Oct 20 05:51:05 PDT 2014
Cecil R Bearden wrote:
> I need a little input from you guys.
>
> a couple weeks ago I mounted 2 new 18.4x38 tires on my 2-105 White.
> Tires were mounted tubeless with some type of fluid in the tire. I
> think it may have been some type of glycol based anti-freeze . One rim
> needed some welding on a rusted place as the rim had been outside since
> last summer after removing the tire. We mounted the tires & tubes with
> no problems noted. Filled both tires with methanol/water solution. I
> used windshield washer fluid when methanol was so much more expensive.
> Tires hold about 100 gallons, so we added 1/2 of a barrel of methanol.
> filled the remaining with air. while sowing wheat about 2 weeks later,
> one tire started leaking water at the valve. I checked the valve and
> found it to be loose from the tube. 2 days later I pumped the fluid out
> and broke down the tire and found valve separated from the tube and a
> 1inch long cut about 6 inches from the valve. I assumed the cut was
> from a pinch with the tire spoon. Or, maybe the tube was caught between
> the tire & rim. We inflated and deflated the tube to straighten it
> out. We also used tire mounting lube to mount the tire on the rim. I
> repaired the tube last Wednesday. Yesterday I noticed fluid running out
> of the valve hole on the other tire and a lot of the mounting lube had
> coagulated at the base of the tire. I jacked the tire up and put the
> valve on top as I did not have time to work on it.
>
> My question is 2 part. Would the use of mounting lube cause a loose
> tire on the rim and it possibly slip and pull the valve out?? Would
> the use of Methanol be deteriorating the rubber in the tube. and causing
> the problem. These tires are Speedway 18.4 x 38 8 ply rating. Tubes
> were 2 different brands. Gateway the first one, and Doberman the
> second. I was only pulling a 16 ft spring tooth with a 12 ft harrow
> behind it on 30 acres and later a 16x8 JD drill before the first tire
> started leaking... The load was not anything out of the ordinary.
>
> Cecil in OKla
Methanol eats rubber REAL quick. I would bet the methanol is the only
reason for the problem.
--
Steve W.
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