Posted by Dick L on October 13, 2018 at 13:14:29 from (50.51.89.50):
I haven't had to put air in the rear tires in the 16 years I have had it. Went out to use it about a month ago and it flat. Took the air compressor out and blew it up and the next morning it was flat again. I Blew it up again and got my spray bottle with soap water in and sprayed it down. The only place I could get bubbles was from around the valve stem at the rim. No nails in the tire any where and no visible puncher marks. I decided after lunch today I would attempt pull the inter tube out and get it patched if I could anymore. I set up my video camera to prove I was attempting to do it from my wheel chair. When I had the bead over the rim on the outer side of the rim I needed a rest and when I went to shut off the camera it had gone dead. I went ahead and broke the bead in on the other side and pulled the tube out. I blew it up and sprayed it good with soap water and can't get one bubble anywhere. I then blew it up fat and still could not find a leak. I put it in the shed and will check it in the morning. If it is down I'll take it to a tire shop. Then have a tub they can submerge a section under water and find it. At least I proved to myself I can still change tractor tires at 80 even though I have to do it setting down. I might do a video putting it back in. It will not e a how to video just how I do it right way or wrong way.
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Today's Featured Article - Good As New - by Bill Goodwin. In the summer of 1995, my father, Russ Goodwin, and I acquired the 1945 Farmall B that my grandfather used as an overseer on a farm in Waynesboro, Georgia. After my grandfather�s death in 1955, J.P. Rollins, son of the landowner, used the tractor. In the winter 1985, while in his possession the engine block cracked and was unrepairable. He had told my father
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