johnjk
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
B3200 w/loader, Woods RC5 brush hog, 4' box blade, tooth bar, B1700 MMM,
I've been chasing leaking tire beads on my 4-wheeler for quite a while and wanted to get some opinions on using that green goop to seal them up vs throwing in some tubes. My leaks are all where the tires meet the rims, and they are aftermarket aluminum rims on the 4-wheeler put on by the previous owner. They look good but the quality is pretty low.
I've tried the route of breaking the bead, cleaning what I can see off the rim, no corrosion just some dirt, reapplying bead sealer and reinflating the tire. Works for a while but they always come back. I do have the factory rims and tires that came with it when I bought it, but they are dry rotted and have been plugged quite a few times.
I know the latex based stuff would be a mess when you have to change the tire, but based on putting in tubes on all four, and adding this stuff to each tire, which way would you go? I also found a non latex based product called Flat Out by Multi Seal that washes out with water if you ever have to change the tire.
I've tried the route of breaking the bead, cleaning what I can see off the rim, no corrosion just some dirt, reapplying bead sealer and reinflating the tire. Works for a while but they always come back. I do have the factory rims and tires that came with it when I bought it, but they are dry rotted and have been plugged quite a few times.
I know the latex based stuff would be a mess when you have to change the tire, but based on putting in tubes on all four, and adding this stuff to each tire, which way would you go? I also found a non latex based product called Flat Out by Multi Seal that washes out with water if you ever have to change the tire.
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