One of the rear turf tires on my BX1870 recently started leaking Rim Guard somewhere at the tire bead/rim interface. Tractor is about 4.5 years old, and the the tires are otherwise in fairly good condition. Several months ago one of the plastic tire stems failed, which I learned here on OTT is not uncommon with Rim Guard. My dealer replaced them with metal stems, and had to break the tire bead, then top off the beet juice.
I think the problem only happens when I'm carrying a heavy load on the 3ph. I've got a carryall there that I'm filling up with fresh cut red oak, often to the capacity of what the hitch can lift. That obviously put a lot more weight on the tires. I've made sure there at the right pressure, and even tried upping the pressure a bit. But especially when driving on the uneven trails that get me to my wood piles, a small amount of the stick brown juice is squirming its way out at the bead.
I'm wondering if anyone knows if this can be fixed just by cleaning up the rim/tire interface. Given the Rim Guard, it's not something I want to deal with myself. And I suspect the problem might be a result of the bead area not being appropriately clean after they replaced the stems.
I suppose I could also consider new tires in order to better ensure getting past this problem. The turfs have worked well for me, since this is my lawn mower as well as a utility tractor. But I might consider something with stiffer sidewalls if that will better prevent the issue from recurring.
Thanks for any insights!
I think the problem only happens when I'm carrying a heavy load on the 3ph. I've got a carryall there that I'm filling up with fresh cut red oak, often to the capacity of what the hitch can lift. That obviously put a lot more weight on the tires. I've made sure there at the right pressure, and even tried upping the pressure a bit. But especially when driving on the uneven trails that get me to my wood piles, a small amount of the stick brown juice is squirming its way out at the bead.
I'm wondering if anyone knows if this can be fixed just by cleaning up the rim/tire interface. Given the Rim Guard, it's not something I want to deal with myself. And I suspect the problem might be a result of the bead area not being appropriately clean after they replaced the stems.
I suppose I could also consider new tires in order to better ensure getting past this problem. The turfs have worked well for me, since this is my lawn mower as well as a utility tractor. But I might consider something with stiffer sidewalls if that will better prevent the issue from recurring.
Thanks for any insights!