L245DT tire size/replacement

Dave W

New member

Equipment
L245DT
Dec 28, 2020
2
0
1
NM
I was recently gifted a L245DT that needs its tires replaced (dry rot/cracked). It currently has 7.2-16 R1 Goodyear power torque on the front and 11.2-24 R1 Multi Trac on the rear. Does anyone know if these are the factory tire sizes for a L245DT? None of the local tire shops can get a 7.2-16 and I know I have to keep the tire ratio close for using the 4wd. Anyone have a suggestion for replacement tires? Thanks.

Dave
 

NCL4701

Well-known member

Equipment
L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
2,823
4,301
113
Central Piedmont, NC
I was recently gifted a L245DT that needs its tires replaced (dry rot/cracked). It currently has 7.2-16 R1 Goodyear power torque on the front and 11.2-24 R1 Multi Trac on the rear. Does anyone know if these are the factory tire sizes for a L245DT? None of the local tire shops can get a 7.2-16 and I know I have to keep the tire ratio close for using the 4wd. Anyone have a suggestion for replacement tires? Thanks.

Dave
They ain’t cheap but 7.2 - 16 R1’s are available.


Don’t know if you’ve used SimpleTire before or not. I have for light truck off-road tires and implement tires. They have relationships with tire shops in a pretty wide area and will ship direct to the shop of your choice (they have a finder on their site) or ship straight to you. At least around here the ag tire type shops don’t mind mounting whatever if you bring them the tires and rims.

You may be able to source elsewhere. Just saying they’re out there if you want 7.2 - 16 R1’s.
 

PoTreeBoy

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L35 Ford 3930
Mar 24, 2020
2,828
1,544
113
WestTn/NoMs
I was recently gifted a L245DT that needs its tires replaced (dry rot/cracked). It currently has 7.2-16 R1 Goodyear power torque on the front and 11.2-24 R1 Multi Trac on the rear. Does anyone know if these are the factory tire sizes for a L245DT? None of the local tire shops can get a 7.2-16 and I know I have to keep the tire ratio close for using the 4wd. Anyone have a suggestion for replacement tires? Thanks.

Dave
According to tractordata.com, the fronts should be 5.00-15. They're not always right. Anybody got a manual or tractor?
Edit: there's a manual at kubotabooks.com but it doesn't have tire sizes. Messick's parts says 7-16 4, whatever that means.
Edit 2: I think the 5.00-15 is for 2wd.
 
Last edited:

Dave W

New member

Equipment
L245DT
Dec 28, 2020
2
0
1
NM
Thank you for the quick replies.

I was finally able to dig up an old scanned copy of the owner manual. It lists the factory tires as front: FLSW 7-16 4PR, and rear: FLSW 11.2/10-24 4PR.

The 5-15 was listed for the L245F model in the manual.

I am assuming that the 4PR means 4-ply rating? Any suggestions on staying with this rating or going to a heavier ply? This tractor also has a front end loader. I'm thinking with additional weight up front, it might not hurt to increase the ply rating?
 

PoTreeBoy

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L35 Ford 3930
Mar 24, 2020
2,828
1,544
113
WestTn/NoMs
Thank you for the quick replies.

I was finally able to dig up an old scanned copy of the owner manual. It lists the factory tires as front: FLSW 7-16 4PR, and rear: FLSW 11.2/10-24 4PR.

The 5-15 was listed for the L245F model in the manual.

I am assuming that the 4PR means 4-ply rating? Any suggestions on staying with this rating or going to a heavier ply? This tractor also has a front end loader. I'm thinking with additional weight up front, it might not hurt to increase the ply rating?
I'd compare the rolling radius, leaning toward the higher load rating.
 

K.P.

Member

Equipment
B7300, LA272 FEL, B2650, 8160 Ballast, G2460G Mower, Danuser 20/40, Woods RB60
Aug 11, 2010
84
3
8
Cary, IL
Thank you for the quick replies.

I was finally able to dig up an old scanned copy of the owner manual. It lists the factory tires as front: FLSW 7-16 4PR, and rear: FLSW 11.2/10-24 4PR.

The 5-15 was listed for the L245F model in the manual.

I am assuming that the 4PR means 4-ply rating? Any suggestions on staying with this rating or going to a heavier ply? This tractor also has a front end loader. I'm thinking with additional weight up front, it might not hurt to increase the ply rating?
I’d recommend staying with the manufacturer specified ply. The tire ply acts as your suspension in a way and the OE spec already accounts for an FEL. More plys results in a rougher ride and often less grip on ice.

The Best way to compensate for load on the front is by having counter weight mounted to the three point hitch. That can be in the form of an actual ballast device like a Ballast Box, or it can be an implement of substantial weight like a Box Blade.