About 3 weeks ago my son asked if he could make some money by cutting the lawn. Soon he returns, saying both tires on one side of the lawn tractor had rapidly deflated. I discover that he, while happily listening to some tunes on his headphones, had ripped holes in the sidewalls of the left front and rear tires by scraping them against a bolt in a gate.
To cut a long story short, I now have new tires in hand, together with some tire irons. My son and I are ready to remove the old tubeless skins and install the new. No problem......or so we thought. :roll: We have just spent over a hour failing to remove the rear tire from the steel, one-piece wheel. All our efforts to break the bead from the wheel have come to nought.........well, not quite nought since I am convinced that the old tire sneered and jeered at our fruitless efforts.
Starting with a simple-minded, heave-ho at the bead with a tire iron, we progressed through a succession of ever-more-complex jury rigs, culminating with both of us furiously jumping up and down on 2-by-4's leveraged under a garden fence rail. All to no avail, as the 20 year-old tires seem welded to the 20 year-old wheels.
So this is my question: is there some straightforward, foolproof method for breaking the bead that can be mastered even by simpletons and clueless dolts such as my son and myself? I have spent about $100 on 3 tires and tire irons (don't ask about the third tire :x ) and would like to avoid spending more on an expensive bead breaker. After all, my GS is far more deserving, with acceleration and handling far outmatching the tractor and its swinish wheels. Your wise advice will be much appreciated, as round 2 of this unequal struggle is scheduled to recommence tomorrow. 8O
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