Tires, tires, tires... I ordered the BearClaws!!
#21
Tires, tires, tires help me decide.. bearclaws or mudlites
I will agree www.4atvtires.com is great to deal with. They are a bunch of East Ky. Good ole boys! I have bought many tires from them. www.tireunlimited.com is pretty good, they are 50 miles away from me!
#22
Tires, tires, tires help me decide.. bearclaws or mudlites
Man, after calling about 10 places this morning I have had no luck locally to find 26" tires at a decent price anyways.... The dealers are outrageous and no one else seems to carry anything over 25" or not the brands I am looking for. Guess it will be www.4atvtires.com then. Hopefully they can get them here to me fast.
Now the question is 26 or 27? It is only $22 more for the 27's.
Now the question is 26 or 27? It is only $22 more for the 27's.
#23
#24
Tires, tires, tires help me decide.. bearclaws or mudlites
Alway had good, prompt service out of www.4atvtires
#26
#27
#28
#29
Tires, tires, tires... I ordered the BearClaws!!
If you can't change them out yourself, go to most any farm/ranch supply store. They usually do tire work fairly cheap. They have experience with the low pressure tires, like those of an ATV. I did mine on my neighbor's Harbor Freight bench top tire changer .
#30
Tires, tires, tires... I ordered the BearClaws!!
The reasons I change my own tires are:
1. I do it often enough that it would become a cost issue.
2. The tire store machines have a tendency to do more damage to the beads (and rims) than I do.
You would need:
1. A compressor with a big tank (lots of air to seat beads).
2. High flow tire filler attachement.
3. A bead breaker. I made mine, the cheap ones bend. There is a picture of mine in the "general stuff" are
4. Two of the Good ATV tire irons. Sucks with one.
5. A ratchet strap.
6. Brush and Dish soap for seating beads.
It obviously isn't cost effective if you don't already have most of this tuff.
I had scrap steel laying around and made the bead breaker when I was bored. I love it, It is awesome.
POP goes the bead. I like the sound. I even popped dunlops off a week ago.
1. I do it often enough that it would become a cost issue.
2. The tire store machines have a tendency to do more damage to the beads (and rims) than I do.
You would need:
1. A compressor with a big tank (lots of air to seat beads).
2. High flow tire filler attachement.
3. A bead breaker. I made mine, the cheap ones bend. There is a picture of mine in the "general stuff" are
4. Two of the Good ATV tire irons. Sucks with one.
5. A ratchet strap.
6. Brush and Dish soap for seating beads.
It obviously isn't cost effective if you don't already have most of this tuff.
I had scrap steel laying around and made the bead breaker when I was bored. I love it, It is awesome.
POP goes the bead. I like the sound. I even popped dunlops off a week ago.