11 Attachment(s)
Tractor tire Bead breaker
OH NO! not another bead breaker. There are probably no less than 25 bead breakers published Here on Homemade tools.net, but I didn't have one.
Which is hard to believe as many of my own tractor and semi tires I've replaced or repaired in the past several years. Until now I mostly just used the backhoe, but sometimes it is just not convenient to use. I had a flat on my case tractor and decided it was past time to replace the old dry rotted rear tires with new ones. Time to make a bead breaker. SO IO cut a length of 2 1/2" sq. tubing and a piece of 2" sq tubing both having 1/4" wall thickness, this meant I was either going to have to grind a deep grove in 1 side of the 2" tube or remove the weld seam from the inside of the larger tube. I chucked it in my 4 jaw then with a 12" long boring bar I removed the weld
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Then sanded the paint off of the 2" tubing to get it to fit inside
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Since it looked like I was going to spend way too much time on something I could probably buy for under 100 dollars I torched the holes in the cap plates that the forcing bolt was going to pass through, and the weld the nut on the ram foot
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The pipe sleeve is just to protect the threads while welding
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I used my hose crimper to squeeze a nut onto the forcing bolt for it to be able to force the ram out against the tire
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I wasn't going to spend anymore time one it until I was sure it was going to work
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It works just fine awkward with the c clamp so now that I know it works I will refine it with a pressure screw to secure it to the rim