Posted by JK-NY on January 12, 2021 at 10:03:17 from (174.197.212.102):
I have put new tires on the rear of three of my tractors over the years, and have had to fix a few more too. I always take the rim/ tire off and do them flat on the ground like you would with a smaller tire or truck tires. (I have changed my share of them too.) My neighbor would change them while still on the tractor and I have heard that is how most tire men do it. I have never seen it done that way myself. Just got wondering how most folks here do them / have them done. Main issue for me is breaking stubborn beads loose, I know that there is tools that would work with the rear wheel on the tractor but I don’t have any. Thank you for any replies in advance.
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Today's Featured Article - Restoring a John Deere 2010 Diesel Tractor - by Jim Nielsen. Following seven years working in California's Silicon Valley, my wife, baby son and I moved back to Australia to retire. We bought a small 'farm' of about 50 acres near Bendigo, in the state of Victoria. I soon found that it would be very useful to have a tractor around the place for things such as grading our long drive and brush-hogging the fields. I was also embarking on planting 1000 eucalyptus trees, and hence I would need a ripper, small disk plow, sprayer etc. to get these things accompli
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