Tires and stuff
Posted: Mon Jun 26, 2023 8:50 pm
Did some "Me" stuff today, finally spent a little time in the tent garage sweating over the Princess Awesome tire machine... last fall I got a deal on some good used 8-16 AG tires, and they've been sitting in the tent garage waiting for me to clean and prep the wheels and generally get my act together...
Six like new take off tires - that still have the nubbies attached
- 2 for Max (my 446) and four to give BluZuki some attitude when going through the forest.
Only problem was the sidewalls had really pulled in from being stored flat (or maybe that's just how AG tires are
) Just too much of a gap between the tire and rim to seat the bead - and I don't have one of those air cannon bead blasters...
Tried a couple of ways to spread the sidewalls so they would fit the rims better - used blocks of wood and an old inner tube - both worked to spread the tires for a short time, but they settled back down within minutes - still way too much of an air gap to set the bead.
Even the big ratchet strap didn't squash the tire enough
The pair going on the Case will get tubes for liquid ballast, so they shouldn't be a problem to mount...
Decided to practice by starting with the ones going on BluZuki - bought some used 16" rims for a Suzuki Grand Vitara that have the same bolt pattern as the Samurai... cleaned up rust on the rim beads and after the paint dried for a week or two, figured it was time to try and get a couple of them mounted... Note to self - Six ply sidewalls seemed a lot stiffer than any car or light truck tire I mounted before.
I tried a couple of times to get the bead to seat and had absolutely no luck
I was ready to give up and take them to a tire shop for mounting.
But stubborn me decided instead to do a little online YouTube educating and discovered the "bicycle inner tube trick".
Off to Canadian Tire I went and bought me a new 16" bicycle inner tube...
Put a little bit of air in the bicycle inner tube, slathered it with lots of tire lube and squeezed into the void between the tire and rim.
It worked like a charm, filled the gap, and as the tire gradually filled with air the bicycle inner tube was squeezed out from between tire and rim
... and the rest was history
Disclaimer... I still have more rims to prep, but at least now I know another trick to help getting the tire beads to seat...
Six like new take off tires - that still have the nubbies attached
Only problem was the sidewalls had really pulled in from being stored flat (or maybe that's just how AG tires are
Tried a couple of ways to spread the sidewalls so they would fit the rims better - used blocks of wood and an old inner tube - both worked to spread the tires for a short time, but they settled back down within minutes - still way too much of an air gap to set the bead.
Even the big ratchet strap didn't squash the tire enough
The pair going on the Case will get tubes for liquid ballast, so they shouldn't be a problem to mount...
Decided to practice by starting with the ones going on BluZuki - bought some used 16" rims for a Suzuki Grand Vitara that have the same bolt pattern as the Samurai... cleaned up rust on the rim beads and after the paint dried for a week or two, figured it was time to try and get a couple of them mounted... Note to self - Six ply sidewalls seemed a lot stiffer than any car or light truck tire I mounted before.
I tried a couple of times to get the bead to seat and had absolutely no luck
But stubborn me decided instead to do a little online YouTube educating and discovered the "bicycle inner tube trick".
Off to Canadian Tire I went and bought me a new 16" bicycle inner tube...
Put a little bit of air in the bicycle inner tube, slathered it with lots of tire lube and squeezed into the void between the tire and rim.
It worked like a charm, filled the gap, and as the tire gradually filled with air the bicycle inner tube was squeezed out from between tire and rim
... and the rest was history
Disclaimer... I still have more rims to prep, but at least now I know another trick to help getting the tire beads to seat...