I am buying a tractor that has this situation and the seller told me the dealer changed the rear tires to turf for an extra $800 and did an adjustmentbeware mixing tires.
at the factory the ratio of front / rear tire circumferences are determined by the engineers.
changing the ratio may put undue stress on one of the axles.
good way to make expensive repair necessary changing the ratios.
If ratios kept the same this is not an issue.
I am buying a tractor that has this situation and the seller told me the dealer changed the rear tires to turf for an extra $800 and did an adjustmentWhy?
I am buying a tractor that has this situation and the seller told me the dealer changed the rear tires to turf for an extra $800 and did an adjustmentbeware mixing tires.
at the factory the ratio of front / rear tire circumferences are determined by the engineers.
changing the ratio may put undue stress on one of the axles.
good way to make expensive repair necessary changing the ratios.
If ratios kept the same this is not an issue.
I am buying a tractor that has this situation and the seller told me the dealer changed the rear tires to turf for an extra $800 and did an adjustmentWhy?
Thank you2WD, no problem. If it’s 4WD, there is no “adjustment” to make. It’s possible the tire diameters just happen to be the right ratio, but that’d just be luck, and dealers aren’t that good.
If you trust the seller, maybe ask what percentage of the time they ran it in 4WD and go from there.
Here you go, you will be asking about this in the futureHi, Is it possible to do an adjustment so you can have AG on the front and Turf on the back?
I have had turfs on front and R4s on rear of my B7200DT for well over a decade. Tire dealer did the calcs when I had them changed over so yes as long as the front - rear circumference ratio is right you can mix and match.Hi, Is it possible to do an adjustment so you can have AG on the front and Turf on the back?
Thank you2WD, no problem. If it’s 4WD, there is no “adjustment” to make. It’s possible the tire diameters just happen to be the right ratio, but that’d just be luck, and dealers aren’t that good.
If you trust the seller, maybe ask what percentage of the time they ran it in 4WD and go from there.
I tried this already, it's clear. ThanksHere you go, you will be asking about this in the future
Disregard, I opened the wrong attachmentThank you
I tried this already, it's clear. Thanks
Thank you.Depending on the size and weight of the machine, you can test how closely matched the front is to the rear. Drive tractor to flat surface. Place trans in neutral and engage the front axle. Give the machine a push. Does it resist or make any excessive noises? If it pushes ok, they are matched. If resists or makes excessive noise your RCR is off. If the machine is too large or heavy to push manually, you can do the same test by using a tow vehicle.