I have been doing most of my own tires now for decades ever since I was laid off from a tire shop. I started out using a time hammer which does work well if you can hit the same place 3 times In a row. My hammer has a special handle made to fit a left handed person. But now days I do my best to use my found in a junk pile truck tire bead breaker tool. It has 2 air cylinder one that clamps the break down foot to the rim and then a foot between 2 solid feet and the center foot pushes down on the tire and breaks the bead free. For a novice I recommend a slide hammer type bead breaker since you do not have to aim it and works well and one big key is good old dish soap and water poured on the bead before you start working on the tire and a couple of 3 foot long tire spoons
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Today's Featured Article - Experimental Tractors Article - by Danny Bowes (Dsl). Tractor technology appears to have nearly hit it's pinnacle of development. If you agreed with the subtitle, you are rather mistaken. Quite, actually. As a matter of fact, some of the technology experimented with over 40 years ago makes today's tractor technology seem absolutely stale by comparison. Experimentation, from the most complex assembly to the most simple and mundane component, is as an integral a part of any farm tractor's development
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