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Rear tractor tires??

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    Rear tractor tires??

    We have Deere 4760 that we use for some field work and lots of loader work and feeding cows in the winter. We were running firestone on it but they are such a hard rubber that they have poor traction on ice. So we tried some Chinese tires but their tires are a much smaller footprint/ height which doesn't work well with a mfwd. When the fronts blew the sidewalls out that was the end of them. We then put firestone on the fronts and alliance on the rear and were quite impressed. Now after three years the alliance have stress cracks around the lugs and a goose egg showed up in the sidewall and i don't think it's long till it blows out in two feet of mud in the corral. The firestone's look like new yet.

    Just wondering what others have had good luck with. This unit is used almost daily and needs something reliable. I imagine there might be some warranty on this but I don't know if I would want another of the same thing on here.

    TIA

    It's worse then it looks in these poor pictures.

    #2
    Tires

    We've had good luck with Galaxy, they hold up well for field and loader work and logging. Never seen any gain paying for premium brands.
    I miss Stomil tires, those things lasted forever

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      #3
      Dalek alliance and galaxy are the same company. We had some galaxy wagon tires a while back and were quite happy with them. Much more impressed with them than Goodyear or titan. We had some tubeless tires that started leaking through the sidewall after a couple of months and the dealers solution was to hand us a couple of tubes. Just because we change all our tires in the shop ourselves doesn't mean we like to do it.

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        #4
        Trellburgs on the rear would be nice, square profile so lots of surface contact, and you can lower psi without worrying about sidewalls cracking. Not sure if theyd have your size though.

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          #5
          When we bought our new seeding tractor in 2013 it had Goodyears on it. Also on the lot was another tractor with the same size tires but Firestones. I paid them to swap them.... the Firestones actually smelled "good" when they were new...and they still have that sweet smell but maybe not as intense. It only seeds and otherwise sits it the shed most of the year. The tire size molded into the surface of the lug that contacts the soil isn't even completely wore off yet.


          I think firestone is a superior tire, but you're going to pay for it.

          Farming little leaque.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
            When we bought our new seeding tractor in 2013 it had Goodyears on it. Also on the lot was another tractor with the same size tires but Firestones. I paid them to swap them.... the Firestones actually smelled "good" when they were new...and they still have that sweet smell but maybe not as intense. It only seeds and otherwise sits it the shed most of the year. The tire size molded into the surface of the lug that contacts the soil isn't even completely wore off yet.


            I think firestone is a superior tire, but you're going to pay for it.

            Farming little leaque.
            Farma, im also farming little league. Slowly but surely switching everything to firerocks. Goodyear bias dyna torque IIs have terrible cracking on the face, and weak sidewalls in my experience. Goodyear implement were goid till they started being mfg'd by titan, now we cant get the tubeless versions to hold air, so switching as they wear out. I've had 0 luck with anything offshore.

            Preferences,
            Ag:firestone
            Heavy truck steer: michelin!
            Heavy truck drive: bridgestone
            Trailer: firestone

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              #7
              I haven't wore off the tire size print on the face of my Michelin agribib but they are absolute garbage tires.

              Sidewall splits to the cords.

              Face splits between lugs....

              And it's tough to deal with the Michelin rep....no worries his engineer tells him ....put it in writing changes the tune....

              Less than 900 hours and it could be a 30000 dollar hit.....

              Might as well trade the tractor...

              Comment


                #8
                Anyone have experience with tracks?
                I have heard 3,000 to 4,000 hours they need replacing at a cost of about $50,000?

                Comment


                  #9
                  We did a major rebuild of our old JD fwa loader tractor last fall as it approached 18,000 hours. Finished up by changing out the rear tires. Goodyears that were down to about 30% tread. I reckon they were the originals and there wasn't a hole in them nor the tubes. I don't think they had ever been off or had a puncture since new. Same tractor has Goodyear dyna-torques on the front and the last set didn't last 1000 hours before they split out between the lugs. Did Goodyear make good tires years ago and crap now or is that just the difference between wear on front versus rear tires on a loader tractor?

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                    #10
                    Trelleborg Wheel Systems will raise prices on its agricultural and forestry tires in North America by 8% effective April 1, 2017.

                    The price increase "is driven by the recent increase in raw material prices," says the company.


                    Apparently all manufacturers have announced similar increases lately

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