Thanks for the replies guys, much appreciated. Yes the tires are turfs, sorry for not mentioning that.
Great advice there. I live in eastern Nova Scotia Canada and was going to try plummers anitfreeze as it's non toxic and can be purchased at the local Walmart for about $4 a gallon.
Lawn is quite dry as it's a steep grade and great drainage.
From the info I've looked at so far it looks like 31 gallons per tire so time to start purchasing some plummers antifreeze.
I'm going to do this myself so I'm assuming one can purchase a fitting that will allow you to fill the tires with fluid and allow air to escape while doing so.
I have a small water pump would that work to fill the tires. It's a Rigid (brand name) pump so it will pump all day, quite powerful.
Any suggestions on filling these or a link to how it's done.
Many thanks,
Keith
Keith,
there are kits that you can buy locally - that will help you.
I did mine last year - and I found a way to do it that cuts the time down a good bit.
Get the valve stem out, place stem at 12 o'clock, let air out, get your buckets full and all that good stuff ready, jack up your tire on that side, PUSH down hard on the top of the tire and push as much air out as you can, the tire will stay "flat" for a minute or two, as the fluid pushes in - the air will force itself back to build the tire back out - once the tire gets back to shape, cut pump off - flatten tire again - this will push the air back into the bucket, and start again.
By pushing the air out multi times, the pump can push the liquid in much faster!
If you are not sure how much you have in it, pull the hose OFF the stem, if you push and liquid comes out, you are a little high, if NO liquid comes out, pump more in.
- make sure you are at 12 o'clock the entire time.