Tire Problems

Anonymous-0

Well-known Member
I store my lawn tractors inside a building that has only a dirt floor. This spring when I go to start them up I have my usual low tires and flat tires. I pump them up expecting to be ready to go to find that they are only flat again. I live in southern Ontario so you can understand winters are cold but what is the best way to store a tire. I am assuming that the bead has broken with the low temperature. Is there anyway I can seal the bead again when I go to pump them up? Have been waiting all winter to get going and now I have been stopped with repairs. Thanks.
 
put it up on jackstands or blocks when you store it or pump up tires before you move it.
Jim
 
Anytime I replace or repair a tire I use a dab of cup grease on bead it helps getting it on and also helps seat & seal it.Dude11
 
The local gas station/ repair shop can inflate your tires, and if the valves are ok, they will usually stay up to the correct pressure. It takes a blast of high pressure air to do that, something the average home compressor will not do!
 
Don't use grease or petroleum oil on tires. It will slowly destroy the tires. Use Vegetable oil, I use the cheapest I can buy at the grocery store.

Bob
 
Wow!! Never heard of that.I've been doing it for all my adult life,never have a tire that was effected.In fact,they will dryrot on side walls over some yrs.but the bead always looks fresh when they are removed.I always thought rubber was a petroleum type product,hence the use of cup grease.Dude11
 
Wrap a ratchet strap around the circumference of the tire. Tighten it up until the bead presses against the rim. Air your tire up.
 
had the same problem til I "slimed" my tires.
The ratchet strap will help you seat it, but you'll need the slime to keep it inflated.

Last ditch- tube
 
Last ditch- tube
Actually first ditch. I started to make that reply when I first saw this thread last night. If the valves leak, you can cut the tube if it sits flat all winter. On the other hand, I have never wrenched a tubeless tire off a tractor rim after I put a tube in it, though.
 
Auto parts stores that sell to working garages have several tire products to promote good bead seal. I agree, petroleum products are bad for rubber. On tires, I use hand washing dish detergent [ when madge isn't soaking fingernails in it ] A rub with a bar of softened hand soap, or waterless hand cleaner eases installation, and promotes tight bead seal. Scabby rims won't seal,
sanded, primed, painted ones will.
 
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