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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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Farmall 130 tire question

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Hugh MacKay

02-19-2004 05:01:54




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My Farmall 130, equiped with 12.4x24 rear tires and about half worn. One tire developed quite a large break about 3" long on side wall, with tube protruding. I didn't really want to match it up with a new tire because of the size difference. Yesterday I ran across a good used tire with same 45 degree tread and about same tread wear as my tires. Bought it and at home I started comparing it with my current tires as it looked different. Turns out my current tires have 19 treads around the circumference while the tire I bought only has 16 treads. My question is will this tire have as much traction as my old tires? These 24" don't have a lot of tread on ground compared to 34", 38", etc. Just curious how much difference I will notice?

My old tires are made in North America, this one is made in Poland. I called a tire guy I know. He tells me all small tractor tires today are made offshore in various parts of Europe and Asia, and even if I bought new tires in 24", I probably couldn't get more than 15 to 16 treads per tire. He joked with me, saying, " This is the industry's way of getting all you old guys to junk your little tractors and buy those $25,000. 4x4 monsters." I somehow get the feeling he may not be kidding. What are your thoughts?

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Bob M

02-19-2004 06:14:32




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 Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Hugh MacKay, 02-19-2004 05:01:54  
Hugh - I gotta agree with the others. There may be a slight difference in traction. However which tire will be better will depend on what kind of surface you happen to be on at the time. For use in the "real world" you'll probably never notice a difference.

Incidentally the mismatched rears on my Super H have different lug counts too. I owned/used the tractor 4 or 5 years before I even noticed one tire had a couple less lugs. My experience in snow, ice, mud and on the pulling track is either both tires are pulling or both are slipping. Neither has an advantage over the other…

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Hugh MacKay

02-20-2004 20:38:37




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 Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Bob M, 02-19-2004 06:14:32  
Bob: I'm not sure you guys have me convinced. Yes, I have seen this work on larger Farmalls with 38" tires, but then they do have a lot more rubber on the ground. I had mis matched tires on my 300 for about three years once, and agree I couldn't notice the difference.

These little tractors don't have more than 2 treads touching ground at any given time. This tire I bought will only have 1 tread on ground at a given time. My Super A has 9.5x24 tires and I checked today and it has 20 treads around the circumference, and made in the USA by General. The 12.4x24 on my 130 were made by Astro in Canada, with 19 treads. My 140 has 15 treads per tire and made offshore, I didn't bother to write it down so now I can't even spell the name of them. Before I put the new Generals on my Super A about ten years ago it had mis matched tires and it was noticeable. What is noticeable today is Super A with no weights, solid or liquid, will give my 130 with wheel weights and 140 with chloride a hard run on my two bottom fast hitch plow.

My dad always said you have to exercise more care with a small horse.

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Farmallkid

02-19-2004 09:24:51




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 Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Bob M, 02-19-2004 06:14:32  
what is better for pulling 23deg bars or 45deg bars?



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Bob M

02-19-2004 13:54:53




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 Re: Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Farmallkid, 02-19-2004 09:24:51  
I’m not big into pulling...I participate just for fun in just a couple stock antique pulls a year. One is an antique pulling association sanctioned transfer sled pull at our local tractor show. The other is a very casual deadweight pull among friends behind the beer tent at the firemen’s carnival.

Which lug angle is better? Hard to tell, a lot depends on conditions. My Super M has nearly new 23 deg tires. It consistently finishes in the top 3 when the track is soft and loose. But when the track’s hard they don’t grip as well - I generally end up spinning out and finishing somewhere in the middle of the pack.

The Super H has mis-matched 45 deg lug tires with maybe 50% tread left. It seems to do a bit better when the track is harder. However it may be as much due to the worn condition of the tires as to the 45 deg lug angle.

Incidentally both my tractors scale within about 75# of their class limits. Consequently I cannot shift weight around in a quest for more traction – I gotta take what I have. This just adds more uncertainty to my “which is better” tire comparison.

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Farmallkid

02-19-2004 14:33:57




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 Re: Re: Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Bob M, 02-19-2004 13:54:53  
That is all i am going to do, pull at the steamshow. thanks



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Hugh MacKay

02-19-2004 10:16:19




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 Re: Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Farmallkid, 02-19-2004 09:24:51  
Farmallkid: I think again it will depend on the ground surface you are working on. My Super A has 9.5x24, 23 degree tires with no liquid or solid weights added. My 130 has 12.4x24, 45 degree with wheel weights and 140 has 11.2x24, 45 degree with chloride. While the Super A will not out pull the other two, it will give them a hard run on firm soil or a roadway. I was at a fairgrounds once where they have horse and ox pulls. Of course those pulls are judged on the percentage of the teams own weight they can pull. Winning horse and ox teams will usually pull twice their own weight. My Super A will pull 3 times its own weight. Not many tractors will do that having to start with the full load on the drag. You try that with your M and let me know how you do. I know the answer.

I did point this out quite clearly to the horse and ox teamsters that evening. So did the anouncer at the fairgrounds. Since the ox teamsters had goaded me into this they did walk away a bit red faced.

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Joe Evans

02-19-2004 05:42:07




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 Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Hugh MacKay, 02-19-2004 05:01:54  
This is mere speculation but here goes. Assuming the 24" tire is about 40" (?) in diameter, this gives that tire an outer circumference of about 126". The 19 lug tire would have lugs spaced at roughly 6-5/8" OC, while the 16 lug would have OC spacings of 7-7/8". Not a real substantial difference.

In my opinion, the 16 lug tire would perform better on surfaces that are loose and or soft. I'm thinking that a lower number lugged tire would behave as if you had attached tire chains. Tire chain 'cross-bars' are spaced rather far apart and in part get their traction from having to 'lift' the tractor slightly every time the cross-bar contacts the traction surface. Additionally, the less lugs there are means that the tractor's weight is supported by less rubber contact area (more PSI) and therefore the lug is more apt to be forced into the ground.

On the other hand, a tire with more lugs would probably afford more traction on a hard, packed surface. Probably that's why slicks are used in drag racing.

Don't those new tractor dealers realize we will never give up our old iron?

Just my 2-bits' worth.

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Hugh MacKay

02-20-2004 21:01:37




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 Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Joe Evans, 02-19-2004 05:42:07  
Joe: I'm not sure you guys have me convinced, read my post responding to Bob M this evening. The 12.4x24 tires are about 42" outside diameter when inflated. The 9.5x24 on my Super A are only about 36" when inflated.



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Randy in NE

02-19-2004 05:35:47




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 Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Hugh MacKay, 02-19-2004 05:01:54  
Hugh. My thoughts would be that any difference in traction would be un-noticable. I would equate this to having two tires with different amounts of wear. Unless you are working your 130 hard in soft soil, etc. I don't think it would be a problem. The rear-end should handle any minor slippage just the same as when you are turning or driving through mud and one wheel is spinning. I remember plowing as a kid with our Case 300. The tire in the furrow always had better traction than the one up on dry land. That left wheel was always slipping a little and it never seemed to bother it any. Just my $0.02 worth of thoughts. Enjoy sitting out on the patio in the sunshine. We had one of those days yesterday here in Nebraska.

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Hugh MacKay

02-20-2004 21:07:26




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 Re: Re: Farmall 130 tire question in reply to Randy in NE, 02-19-2004 05:35:47  
Randy: Not sure you guys have me convinced, read my post responding to Bob M this evening. On the plowing item, this new old tire will be in the furrow.



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