Paul Allwood
Well-known member
Premium Member
Equipment
Kubota B7200HSTD, RC60-72H MMM, homemade FEL, forks & ballast box, rotary hoe
When I made the bits to adapt the skid steer rims to fit the back of my B7200 I drilled an extra hole in the rim to add a second valve. My idea was to use one valve to let the air out as water entered the other valve from the hose.
I had watched videos using the standard adapter that most of you probably have and wondered if I could avoid having to keep doing to turn the water off, press the button on the adaptor to release the pressure built up from the water.
I filled both back tyres today and it worked well.
It went like this:
- Rotate wheel so valves are at their highest point,
Remove both valve cores
- Connect the hose to one valve and turn on,
- Sit back and wait a while,
- When water started dribbling out of the open valve turn off the water supply,
- Re-insert both valve cores and inflate to desired pressure,
- Re-fit valve caps.
Since I might put water in these tyres once I estimate this has saved me about 4-5 minutes of of the next 10 years.... Less time than it took to drill the extra hours and type this post
Not sure if deflated large tractor tyres are prone to de-beading. If they are, this might be a problem as during this process the tyre is completely depressurised.
It's not the most earth shattering thing you've ever seen, probably not even earth shattering at all, but I'm happy when any idea works.
youtube.com
I had watched videos using the standard adapter that most of you probably have and wondered if I could avoid having to keep doing to turn the water off, press the button on the adaptor to release the pressure built up from the water.
I filled both back tyres today and it worked well.
It went like this:
- Rotate wheel so valves are at their highest point,
Remove both valve cores
- Connect the hose to one valve and turn on,
- Sit back and wait a while,
- When water started dribbling out of the open valve turn off the water supply,
- Re-insert both valve cores and inflate to desired pressure,
- Re-fit valve caps.
Since I might put water in these tyres once I estimate this has saved me about 4-5 minutes of of the next 10 years.... Less time than it took to drill the extra hours and type this post
Not sure if deflated large tractor tyres are prone to de-beading. If they are, this might be a problem as during this process the tyre is completely depressurised.
It's not the most earth shattering thing you've ever seen, probably not even earth shattering at all, but I'm happy when any idea works.
1 May 2026
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