Welcome to TheOhioOutdoors
Wanting to join the rest of our members? Login or sign up today!
Login / Join

DIY Tire Changing

You guys don't have a Felons R Us tire shop close by? Mine will do a 4 tire swap with balancing for like 15 bucks a tire. Ain't worth my time at that rate.


We have a good local tire shop that is really reasonable. I no longer do my own brakes or oil changes either because by the time I pay for the parts or oil/filter it really isn't costing me much to have them do it. It isn't worth my time to mess with it.
 

5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,337
212
North Central Ohio
Enjoy man, nothing wrong with doing things yourself for sure. I'm a have it and not need it over need it and not have it kind of guy! I bet once you get the hang of the equipment you'll be happy to have the capability.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Blan37

tpierce

Junior Member
I used Dawn soap on the tire edges. The back side of the tire pushes right on, the front needs a little help with the bar but goes on easily. As others said, you need to keep the tire edges in the cavity at the wheel center.
The 20 minutes/tire included taking off, putting back on, and inflating. I found it easier to inflate by removing the valve and putting a ratchet strap around tire. Overall, a cheap handy tool to have on hand.
 

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
39,772
248
Ohio
I used Dawn soap on the tire edges. The back side of the tire pushes right on, the front needs a little help with the bar but goes on easily. As others said, you need to keep the tire edges in the cavity at the wheel center.
The 20 minutes/tire included taking off, putting back on, and inflating. I found it easier to inflate by removing the valve and putting a ratchet strap around tire. Overall, a cheap handy tool to have on hand.

Excellent tip. We use ratchet straps for this purpose often. Prefer the 2-2.5" wide straps when possible (mower tires, quads, etc.) On smaller tires like 8-10" tires you find on hand carts, generators, our Brown Bed Edger, and such we are forced to use a narrow strap. Sometimes it still requires one person inflating while a second uses their hands to push on the tire. The key is getting as much to bead up as possible. Sometimes you have to let air out to unhook the strap. Be careful on this method. Don't use cheap/worn out straps. When they let go it can get ugly.
 

Blan37

Member
1,800
64
SW Ohio
Screen Shot 2018-09-10 at 8.06.27 PM.png
 

giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Yup...and they scare the shit out of me. We do things you shouldn’t with big trucks and often tear a big chunk out of tires. When you first see a big chunk missing as you kick the tire, the pucker factor is high.
 

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
39,772
248
Ohio
Those are truck tires - different ballgame.
Couldn't tell but it looked like a split rim ring laying on the ground unless that was a portion of the rim. I HATED changing deuce tires. Ours all had a ring. They weren't tough to change once you got the hang of it. Airing them up was scary as crap.
 

"J"

Git Off My Lawn
Supporting Member
57,034
274
North Carolina
Couldn't tell but it looked like a split rim ring laying on the ground unless that was a portion of the rim. I HATED changing deuce tires. Ours all had a ring. They weren't tough to change once you got the hang of it. Airing them up was scary as crap.

Little thing called a tire cage....

Y’all haven’t seen shit until you’ve seen an aircraft tire pop... It’ll make your ears ring for a week...
 
  • Like
Reactions: hickslawns

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
39,772
248
Ohio
We used tire cages. They keep most of the chunks in there. I always hooked a long air hose to the valve stem and walked around the corner to hit the trigger to air them up. Thankfully never had one explode.