[AT] Tractor rears getting old

Spencer Yost yostsw at atis.net
Mon May 25 09:47:47 PDT 2015


Thanks Gil!   Always great to hear from you.  My biggest problem is shipping.  After shipping the local boys are only 20-40$ more so I let them make some money.   Occasionally they even charge me more and give me free installation. (-;


Spencer

> On May 23, 2015, at 20:45, vschwartz1 at comcast.net wrote:
> 
> Spencer; You might try Tucker Tire in Dyersburg, Tenn. I have obtained tires there at a decent price. They do have and keep a lot of tires in stock. They used to be on ATIS some time ago but I haven't seen them around for awhile. 
> Gil 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> 
> From: "Spencer Yost" <yostsw at atis.net> 
> To: "Antique" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com> 
> Sent: Saturday, May 23, 2015 5:32:37 PM 
> Subject: Re: [AT] Tractor rears getting old 
> 
> I have a rear tire set that are bad on my 861. Cracked and has delaminated from the lugs. They don't loose air and I don't need better traction since I just it for mowing, baling, post driving, etc) I At right at $1000 a pair with tubes I guess I'll run them to they blow too. 
> 
> The Allis WD is a common tractor around here and it has the same tires(13.6x28). I often see WDs that can be had for $900-$1400 with good sets of tires on them. One day I may buy one and swap tires. Win-win. Better tires on the work tractor and another antique tractor! 
> 
> Something like this.... 
> 
> http://hickory.craigslist.org/grd/4971117761.html 
> 
> Then again, not sure my current tires would survive the swap. I think they would tho. Probably would have to buy four tubes however. 
> 
> Just is not something that is percolating to the top of my list. 
> 
> 
> Spencer 
> 
>> On May 22, 2015, at 21:58, Indiana Robinson <robinson46176 at gmail.com> wrote: 
>> 
>> Like me many of my tractor rear tires are aging badly... They don't have 
>> holes but many are getting a lot of deep cracks. I have about 4 sets here 
>> but they are as old or older than the ones on the tractors. 
>> New tires are just silly out of the question and still climbing... I used 
>> to buy used tires really cheap at auctions but those days are gone. My big 
>> nemesis these day is tractor pullers. A bunch of the ones I need to replace 
>> are in the range of 13.6 x 38" to 15.5 x 38". Guess what size has the most 
>> tractor pullers chasing them... They especially want the well worn ones 
>> that I used to buy cheap because they were too worn for efficient field 
>> work at heavy tillage. 
>> Some could be saved with liners but liners can be a bit of a crap-shoot. 
>> They are not all that cheap and can cause tube chaffing especially with a 
>> tired ancient tube. They say to put in a new tube and cut the old one open 
>> around the inside and put the new one inside of it to protect it. So then 
>> you have the price of the liners and new tubes both. Still cheaper than new 
>> tires but still painful and labor heavy. If you pay somebody to change them 
>> that is now serious money and you are still running ancient tires. 
>> I have often wished that somebody made a replacement inner tube (at a 
>> reasonable cost) with about a 2 ply cord 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> -- 
>> 
>> Francis Robinson 
>> aka "farmer" 
>> Central Indiana USA 
>> robinson46176 at gmail.com 
>> _______________________________________________ 
>> AT mailing list 
>> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
> 
> _______________________________________________ 
> AT mailing list 
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at




More information about the AT mailing list