I purchased a used L3130, the rear tires are filled but I can't tell with what. When I used it this past week in cold weather it felt like the liquid was partially frozen. What is the best way to determine what they used?
That’s science right there.Your tongue:
Nothing - water
Salty - CaCl2
Sweet - beet juice
Anti-freeze - spit it out!
As far as the concentration goes, if your tires are freezing it’s the wrong mix.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
They will rust, if you don't use something that has a rust inhibitor in it. Place a piece of steel into a pan of water, and make sure that it is totally submerged. Check on it in a week, and you will see that it has rusted. I know that some people use windshield washer fluid, and I am not certain that it will not cause rust. My tires are filled with Rim Guard, and it is a form of molasses, from what the dealer told me when I purchased the tractor.To determine what the tire is filled with... drain three samples into separate bowls. Place one bowl in front of your neighbors cat, one bowl in the freezer, and one bowl pour onto your wife's geraniums. If it kills the cat it's probably antifreeze. If it makes the cat blind it's methanol. If it kills the geraniums it's chloride. If it doesn't freeze ….SUCCESS! It's vodka!
Seriously.... my dealer says (down here in Central Texas) to fill them with plain water but to do so all the way above the top of the rim so air cannot cause the rims to rust internally. My question is: Will that really preserve the rims long enough for them to last for my great-grandchildren? I'm worried that replacements will not be available in the future. (1996 M4700DT)