How To Put a Flat Tire Back on the Rim
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- Опубліковано 7 сер 2024
- It has happened to everyone. You come out to use a piece of equipment, but find a flat tire. Sometimes it's as easy as adding a bit of air to the tire, but other times it has shifted too far off the rim. While it may seem daunting, the fix becomes simple when armed with a ratchet strap and an air compressor.
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Try adding a soapy solution of water, to allow the tire "set" correctly. The soap and rubber combination allows the side wall to 'slip' into the bead easier.
thanks Neil for the suggestion
That was a good tip for new tractor owners Neil. However, the dry dusty seal you have on the bead of that tire may still leak air slowly. Before you start to fill the tire if you spray the bead with soapy water and give it a wipe you can all but eliminate that slow leak from happening. Before there were ratchet straps we used to use chain and a pry bar stuck through the links to put around the center of the tire and then twist the chain with the pry bar to tighten the chain around the tire and get the beads to spread and meet both sides of the rim.
I have used this method several times on smaller tires on zero turn, works great and a lot safer than other methods
💥 That’s exactly what I do. Now to find that pesky leak and plug it.
*Keep on tractoring!*
Appears majority of best practices have been listed - one more suggestion, once tire is seated, inflate to at least 2x your preferred running pressure, then reduce as appropriate. Why you may ask. This allows the bead to fully seat to the wheel, preventing tire/wheel slip, deflation due to poorly seating and ensures fully seated around the entire wheel.
I've done similar -- but not (yet) with my BX25D! Three "tips" include:
1. Take a damp (water) rag and WIPE both the inner side of rim and outside of tire. If there's crud on either, it will (again) leak shortly after your "fix"
2/ Complementary to above, I smear Dawn or similar dish-washing detergent about entire rim before seal/air input, too. This insures a better seal and does not hurt rubber.
3/ Rather than purchase of/use of the ratchet strap, i HIGHLY recommend simply tying a length of rope into a lop but a few inches in diameter larger than the off-rim tire. Insert a piece of wood dowel, tree branch, or whatever you may have at hand and start twisting it. Generally, parallel with ground underneath the tire/wheel is required. Then, when it appears squnched enough (technical term) to accept air, just step on branch/dowel end to hold it sealed while inflating. Upon inflation, you then can safely un-wind your branch/dowel. No worries/chance of snap from the ratchet strap.
My suggestions....
george in Potsda, New York
I recently subscribed to your channel. I just paid $80,000.00 cash on a Kubota L3560 tractor with a cab. With the price came a snowblower, mid-range loader bucket, box blade, snowblower, and a log grapple plus $2000.00 for delivery. I am 58 years old and thought that hydraulics would compensate for my older age and it has! I live in Alaska where we have had a record snowfall of 120 inches! I have been shoveling all my roofs off so the roofs would not collapse under the weight of the snow. My neighbor's garage roof and greenhouse roof have collapsed under the 10 plus feet of snow that we have received. Your U Tube channel is awesome and very informative, keep up the good work! I really need your expertise to maintain my tractor! I am an 82nd Airbourne ranger combat veteran that loves my country but not so much my representatives! God bless my friend and stay safe with the madman Putin on the rampage! BUY SOME IODINE TABLETS! FOR RADIATION!
Raymond Peterson.
I may be the only person that you find that has iodine tablets in my kitchen. I live only a couple miles from Three Mile Island, they provide them to us.
How often should a tire come off the rim? Have a Kioti CK3510SE with only 130 hrs. Had a back tire come off the rim and rimguard run all over my lawn. This was at around 80 hours. The about at 110 hours a front tire came off the rim. I am spot on with servicing, greesing, torques, air as well as garaged when not in use. There's a long list of what's gone wrong with this tractor which led to 5 trips back to the dealer. Frustrated Kioti owner. Thank you for sharing the tip.
So appreciate this method as it was a little challenging at first but with soap and water and a little pulling, we got the tire inflated on my lawn tractor. Thank you
Sometimes after you wipe down the bead you can hook your air hose on with air flowing and turn the tire slowly it will just enough for the bead to make contact and inflate not always but sometimes. If it does not then my go to is the strap. Always great information and tips from Neal . Keep up the great vedios
I used this method, and lost the bead several times in a row. I finally learned about "bead sealant" which I used. I have not lost the bead since. I wish someone had told me sooner about bead sealant: fairly cheap and available from most auto parts dealers.
That's how I've done it for years. Used to do trailer work (many moons ago) and the tires we got were stacked in piles for extended periods and crushed flat. The tie down trick works even when a "burp tank" won't. I've occasionally used the ether and toss a kitchen match from as far away as possible, have someone ready with the hose if you choose to try this technique, and be careful. I've never personally heard of someone getting hurt with the method, or catching their equipment on fire, but the risk is sure there. I highly recommend the tie down method in nearly all cases. Less dramatic, and at my stage in life, that's fine with me. Minimum drama here, thank you.
Thanks for another real world video.
REALLY APPRECIATE ALL YOUR VIDEOS, SOMEONE WHO HAS DONE SOMETHING BEFORE.
I have used this method of seating tires back on the rim for years. Has worked every time for me
A bottle of soapy water goes a long way to help the bead to seal and seat up as well. The strap method has always been my go to in the field.
That grille guard and hood look sweet! Is that a custom design?
Yeh the starter fluid/WD-40 trick can backfire (pun intended).
My wife met your sister-in-law Kim at a party in San Antonio this week. She said she was a "hoot and 1/2".
Thanks!!!!! My tire went flat during our snow storm this weekend. Will give this a try this evening.
If one bead is still on. I use a locking air chuck. Hook up to tire with shop air and pull tire toward the side that is unseated.
Hey Neil. Stopped by at both locations to say hello. The new place is huge. Nice! Sorry we missed you. I just bought a new LX3310HSTC from Vince at Murphy's. Stop by to see Cummins and Bricker. Working to get a Baumalight prototype MS348 for the loader with a power pack summer 2022. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Thanks for videos. Great information
Great video as always. Just one tip. While you’re all set up check and fill all tires. It could have been a tire pressure issue that caused the first tire to come off the rim.
Dude.....your a rental companies nightmare. Flat tie, bent grill guard, and dented hood. Nothing parties like a rental! All kidding aside, good info on the tire fix Neil.
Worked like a dream. Saved my morning. Thank you.
Had a flat on my bx23s no where near my house and shop. I didn't have a ratchet strap. I did have a little 12 volt compressor. Since the front end loader was holding the tire less front end up. I used the down rigger on the backhoe as a sort of press to squeeze it down just enough to get the bead to seat. It did the job. You have to get creative with what you have available.
This just worked for me! thanks so much for posting. Did this for rear tire on Kabota B3030. Also thanks below for the suggestion of adding soapy water!
Glad it helped!
everything you said, but with a couple of additions. usually when the tire comes off the bead, there's all sorts of mud and dirt jammed in there. It's a good idea to get a wet soapy rag/brush/sponge/whatever, and clean the tire and the bead surface. the soap also helps the bead seal faster and smoother (plus the soap bubbles will tell you if you've got a leak)
This also works with rope and a stick. I've done it. Just tie the rope around the tire and the stick and twist the stick until you get pressure on the tire. Love these fixes.
Been there, done that - works very well, but WATCH OUT for the spinning ratchet wheel when you release the strap tension, that wheel will spin like a circular saw blade (I can show you the scars).
Great tip, never thought about doing it that way.
As always, great video, very informative!
Worked like a dream! Thanks for the tip!
Very simple and educational. Big thx
Very useful tip. Last time mine came off the bead I just took it off and to a local tire shop to reset it. However, I could have saved $15 and the time driving if I had known about this.
Worked like a charm. Thanks!
I had to use that same method on a walk behind snowblower. It was New & not yet used sitting up at the cabin. 🤷♂️ I was very glad I had been introduced to that method years prior, but never needed till then.
Great idea. I never would have thought to try that!
Had a Kubota M59 get a complete flat while lifting a pallet on a job last week. Luckily I had a ratchet strap in the truck, worked like a charm, even with a tiny job site compressor
It worked for me after I added some dish soap and kept trying to get enough air between the wheel and tire. The tire popped right in. Then I removed the strap and added air to 30 psi. Thank you.
Great video. Always great info. Thanks. I’m a new LX owner and I would like to know more about diesel fuel additives. Especially storage and winter. Have you done videos on that topic? Thanks
Thankyou for this video my tyre has just come off and although I haven't got it back on yet I feel more confident that I can get it on thankyou
Good job with the tire change
Thanks worked like a charm!!
I've done basically the same thing except i didn't have a ratchet strap available. I simply used a chain connected with a bit of slack to it. Then put a bar between the chain and the tire then twisted the chain with the bar. Accomplishes the exact same thing. Just an option in case folks can't find a ratchet strap. I happen to carry a length of chain on my tractor at all times anyway.
Very cool tip. Now I have to find a video of the explosion method.
This was the first method I thought to seal a bead on a lawn tractor tire, but it's still a 1/2" away. Will update if I find another suggestion that works.
Take the schrader valve out of the valve stem to get more air flow. Also get a locking tire chuck so your hands are not right next to the tire in case something goes wrong.
One potential issue with this method is some air chucks are spring loaded and require the core in place to release the spring in the chuck for air to flow.
@@coypatton3160 use the end of a hose! Don't need that valve to are a tire you need it to keep it in !
Good advice! That's what the I find works for me.
I've done that I've also used grease they both work
I used this method for my little trailer tires most tire shops won't do them.
Been there and done that Neil. I've heard of using eather or starting fluid but, as you said extremely dangerous.
Use a cheetah type bead seater and a Milton locking chuck for continuous air flow. Works every time with out the danger.
Thank you for the video
Nice tip, thanks.
Thanks- this will come in handy as some point.
Dam good demo - this will happen to me sooner than later but at least i know what to attempt- thanks
Total pain to do, thanks for the instructions 😁😁😁🧿🧿🧿🧡🧡🧡🚜❤️
Tore the valve stem out of my right front wheel doing tornado cleanup in Mayfield Kentucky on Wednesday. In that situation, this would not work (no valve stem) but this is a great hack, great job, Neal. Thanks again to Smith's Tire Service and Repair for getting me back in operation so quickly. They also replaced a trailer tire that blew on my way into town.
This happens to me all the time when clearing brush. It never fails that I'll bust off a valve stem and by the time I notice it the tire is off the rim. I use a come-a-long. The cable squeezes the tire a little better and the longer handle gives you more leverage.
I had that problem on L3400 too many times to count. Always came back to a leak in the metal valve stems. Ended up buying tubes about 5 years ago, and haven't had that problem since.
Cool Idea. Thanks.
I have used that method. Like it.
Where was this video a couple of years ago when I needed it?! 🤣 But the easiest way, for me, is take the wheel off, take it to the dealer, let them fix it, and then put it back on the tractor. 🤣🤣🤣
I've been doing that forever works great
Kubota should include valve protectors on all of the front tires. I have ripped the valve off twice working in mud and rocks on L3800.
👍🏼 Fully agree! 😎✌🏼
My B model has them.
@@JR-es5zl yeah I've seen them on some of the models that's why I am aware that there's no excuse for for them not to be on every single rim
good tip, thank you
I would have tried to wipe the rim first, to get off any dirt that got in. Haven't had to do this with my Kubota... but I had a wheelbarrow that EVERY spring... Finally bought tire sealant and (hopefully, seem to have) solved that slow leak issue.
I have that problem with every small pneumatic tire. I just go to Harbor Freight and replace them with the flat free tires as needed. Much less hassle.
Thanks for the trick. I had the same problem tire flat one morning. I inflated the tire but the loss of air persisted. The cause was dirt and tiny rocks that was caught on the bead. Had to take the tire to the tire shop where they removed the tire from the rim. They cleaned the rim and the tire bead, reassembled the tire/wheel, put sealant on the bead and inflated the tire. The cause of the problem was slightly under inflated tires moving a heavy loads turning in sharp circles.
That front guard all bent up… which is cool. My entire front grill is all messed up as well
Nice one
@1:13 -- What happened to the front of that tractor? It looks like something fell on the hood and the front grill protector?
Neat resolution!
Soap up the tire,it helps it conform to the rim, take out the valve core,it let's a higher volume of air into the tire,be ready to put it back in once the tire seats.
Starting fluid works great, make sure the wheel is on the tractor
Put some fluid in the tire let it vaporize run some fluid outside the tire make a trail on the ground away from the tire,lite the trail,be ready to air the tire as soon as the tire expands!!!
I just had this happen 5 days ago. I removed the valve core and pushed the air hose (no air chuck in it) over the valve stem. It injected enough air volume to reseat the beads. I put the valve core back in and aired it up.
With the dust and dirt on that tire, I would have put my glasses on first, in case it launched a piece of dirt when the bead seated. I also agree with the other commenters on the use of a locking tire chuck if you have one.
Be safe out there with compressed air, and keep the great content coming.
it works well i have used it many times.
Sure beats taking the wheel off to get the tire seated with a dump valve bead seating tank. BTW any updates on Kubota getting FEL out to dealers yet?
Good way of checking for leaks is to fill a weed sprayer with soap water and spray the whole tire with it and look for bubbles.
Go heavy on the dish soap.
I’m guessing that is out of your rental fleet. If that’s the case just “send it” down the road as is and blame it on the last renter. 😉
I do that all the time but I do try to not let them get that way. Have been guilty of using starter fluid.
Geez Neil why didn't ya just call AAA LOL. Your method works pretty well, I've done that on lawn/garden tractor tires several times. I pull the shrader valve out of the valve stem prior to trying to reseat the bead though, as it gives full air flow through the valve stem...the shrader valve is pretty restricting when it comes to trying to seat a tire bead...that's why tire shops do this as well.
This shows you don't need fancy tire shop stuff to fix a tire that's come off the bead...happens quite often on farm equipment.
I had a air chuck that clips on and stays. Then pulled on tire. Filled fairly quickly.
👏 bravo!!!😃
I saw an inflated strap used in a tire shop before. Similar idea. Inflation tanks have probably replaced. I know a guy that lost the tip of his thumb when the bead popped on.
That's exactly the way I do it 👍 it's a whole lot safer that way 👍🚜😎
What did you do to the grill guard ? I am not surprised, those guards are pathetic, the one on my 6060 is always shaking.
When mounting trailer tires at my house on the floor. I’ve had good luck pulling the valve core and using a blow gun to to inflate the tire to set beads. You can get a lot of air shot in there pretty fast like an actual tire machine. Get that first real fast blast of air in the tire for rapid expansion.
I do believe you mean you remove the valve stem core, the the valve stem! Removal of the valve stem would require breaking the bead seal to replace the valve stem, whereas the core removal just requires a tool design for that purpose!
Yep you caught my mistake. Valve core is what I meant.
This would be great for wheelbarrow tires.
Do they make a bolt together front wheel for tractors to make DIY easier?
I’ve put starter fluid on them and lit them.
Few tips:
- Keep the garden hose handy just in case.
- Take the valve stem out first.
- I’d never do it on a tire still attached to the unit.
- Only use it as a last option.
99% of tires I’ve ever worked with didn’t need the “explosive” technique. People over do it because they just like playing with fire.
On some tires the only thing that works is starting fluid, but I remove the valve before doing any method, it slows down the air volume too much.
An FEL sure make it easier!
I’d put soapy water on the bead . I have used just a piece of rope a put it around the tire and tie it. Put a bar in and twist until it seals . Tire guys use either Allot.. sometime you can get it to seat by just playing with it
Sometime this past summer
I Put a 14 ply skid steer tire on our
Case 85XT By hand rear tire
Is there more to the story?
@@jimputnam2044 yes I did it in 20 minutes
@@jimputnam2044 I was rather quite pleased with myself
Got to be a good story about what happened to that grill guard and hood.
It's a secondhand tractor, there might be, but I don't know it.
1 can of either and 1 bic lighter!, works every time for me!.
Hair spray, wd40, starter fluid (either), brake cleaner .. the list goes on
I always try that strap method First, but at times I have had to do the wd40 method...
Can you do a video on the proper tire pressure gauge regarding ballast tractor tires. Love your videos, thank you.
Shoot...........I was expecting a ether fireball. I worked at a tire shop years ago, they had a set of big rubber donuts that ranged from 12" to 18" rim sizes, you would soap them up and roll them on the rim, they took up the gap, and you could start air and as the tire inflated it would push them off the rim. They worked slick, used them on tire machines, but they would have worked on situations like this too. I would love to have a set for my tire machine instead of the ratchet strap treatment, but can't find them. Maybe they were a safety hazard and that ended them?
If you don't have a fancy ratchet strap, you can do this with a simple piece of rope. Tie the rope loosely around the tire, put a stick, pipe or breaker bar under the rope and twist it like a tourniquet to put the pressure on the tire an push the bead out.
I bet you got a sweet deal on that tractor!!
Try jacking it up like you did, but take the core out of the valve stem and pull the tire with your hand to close off little leaks while you’ve got the air going to it.
Your little compressor may not be able to put enough air through the hose to blow the tire up, but most with a 10 or 20 gallon tank have enough air reserve in them to easily inflate a tire with the valve core removed. Once you get 15 or 20 PSI in the tire stop putting air in and put the valve core back in before you lose too much air and it comes back off the rim.