I have a B3300su with loaded rear tires. One day I used the tractor to push some snow around, and then a few days later I took it out to snowblow early in the morning (pitch dark) and couldn't get any traction with it, everything just spinning around, and I had to leave it outside where it was. Came back a couple days to finally look at it and found some strange-smelling fluid all underneath. Checked all the fluids and everything was fine -- could NOT figure it out.
Long story short -- it was the liquid from one of the loaded rear tires, now flat. Can't think why this would have happened -- never hit anything, and it was a little cold but nothing we haven't seen before.
What is the liquid they use, anyway? Smells like burnt or rancid molasses or something, can't quite tell.
Anyway, it's going to be fun getting that thing loaded onto a trailer for repair, with the snowblower unit attached and with the access lane snowed in...
Or is this something I can likely do in place? Jack up the back end, somehow reseal the tires and refill with... what? Or remove the wheel and take it in to a tire shop? Seems like I'd never be able to get it back on with the added weight...
Long story short -- it was the liquid from one of the loaded rear tires, now flat. Can't think why this would have happened -- never hit anything, and it was a little cold but nothing we haven't seen before.
What is the liquid they use, anyway? Smells like burnt or rancid molasses or something, can't quite tell.
Anyway, it's going to be fun getting that thing loaded onto a trailer for repair, with the snowblower unit attached and with the access lane snowed in...
Or is this something I can likely do in place? Jack up the back end, somehow reseal the tires and refill with... what? Or remove the wheel and take it in to a tire shop? Seems like I'd never be able to get it back on with the added weight...
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