FLtractor 88 #1 Posted 20 hours ago (edited) Evening, Unsure where to post this. For those of us living in Florida or the hotter southern states that have indigenous plant life that may not exist up north, with barbs, thorns, pointy sharp tire puncturers… what would be an ideal tire type to get for Wheelhorse tractor in this environment of grass, gravel, rocks. No snow. Edited 20 hours ago by FLtractor Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lynnmor 8,209 #2 Posted 19 hours ago Here ya go: 4 5 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ri702bill 10,529 #3 Posted 19 hours ago Ya beat me to it! 1 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FLtractor 88 #4 Posted 16 hours ago Darn. Figured you would of went with the classic 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Achto 30,135 #5 Posted 9 hours ago Tires really depends on what you plan to do with the tractor. Turf tread for lawn care, Ag tread for ground engaging implements. These 8 ply tires should get you through the brush. These tires are kind of multi purpose. Even if they don't hold air they will still stay on the rim. I have a friend that runs these with no air in them all the time. https://www.millertire.com/23x8-50-12-rubber-master-skid-loader-tire-8-ply/ These tires are claimed to be even more multi purpose. I want a set of these but the sticker shock holds me back. Being 6 ply they should hold up well in the pickers. https://www.millertire.com/23x8-50r12-carlisle-versa-turf-compact-radial-tractor-tire-6-ply/ 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AlexR 2,302 #6 Posted 9 hours ago You can get some Horseshoe brand AG bar tires they are 10 ply!!! They have them in 23x10.5-12 size. Not sure how you will get them mounted but once you do you shouldn't have any issues haha. 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WHX?? 53,222 #7 Posted 6 hours ago 2 hours ago, Achto said: Even if they don't hold air they will still stay on the rim. Absolutely ... I should have tubed them and gave up on keeping them aired. At 6 ply they don't really need air. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ri702bill 10,529 #8 Posted 6 hours ago 1 minute ago, WHX?? said: At 6 ply they don't really need air. Rigid sidewalls. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kenneth R Cluley 623 #9 Posted 5 hours ago I have 10 acres just south or Bushnell FL, I use my Charger 12 for anything and everything on this property. Hauling dirt, rock, firewood etc, plowing driveway and spreading limestone. It has greenbriar like I have never seen before. Think "Jack and the Beanstalk". One inch thick and better stalks. Raspberry stalks, grapevine, sand spurs and every other manner of pointy vegetation known to man. I am using a Maxxis AT22x10-12. Even wound barbed wire around axle a few times running fence lines. Never flatted. They are tubeless. Work well in sandy leaf littered terrain. The AT tires have a wider flotation type profile and work well in this soft sandy environment. Look at Craigslist in your area, and Ocala, Always see ATV tires listed that will work.; 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FLtractor 88 #10 Posted 4 hours ago (edited) 4 hours ago, Achto said: Tires really depends on what you plan to do with the tractor. Turf tread for lawn care, Ag tread for ground engaging implements. These 8 ply tires should get you through the brush. These tires are kind of multi purpose. Even if they don't hold air they will still stay on the rim. I have a friend that runs these with no air in them all the time. https://www.millertire.com/23x8-50-12-rubber-master-skid-loader-tire-8-ply/ These tires are claimed to be even more multi purpose. I want a set of these but the sticker shock holds me back. Being 6 ply they should hold up well in the pickers. https://www.millertire.com/23x8-50r12-carlisle-versa-turf-compact-radial-tractor-tire-6-ply/ Thank you for the info the links… courious when you say the 6 ply is more multi purpose than the 8 ply.. wouldn’t the higher 8 ply be more versatile since it’s thicker and heavy dutier? Is there a way to tell the ply thickness by looking at a picture? Or just research tire brand and #s once I find one, such as marketplace ect Edited 4 hours ago by FLtractor Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FLtractor 88 #11 Posted 4 hours ago (edited) 37 minutes ago, Kenneth R Cluley said: I have 10 acres just south or Bushnell FL, I use my Charger 12 for anything and everything on this property. Hauling dirt, rock, firewood etc, plowing driveway and spreading limestone. It has greenbriar like I have never seen before. Think "Jack and the Beanstalk". One inch thick and better stalks. Raspberry stalks, grapevine, sand spurs and every other manner of pointy vegetation known to man. I am using a Maxxis AT22x10-12. Even wound barbed wire around axle a few times running fence lines. Never flatted. They are tubeless. Work well in sandy leaf littered terrain. The AT tires have a wider flotation type profile and work well in this soft sandy environment. Look at Craigslist in your area, and Ocala, Always see ATV tires listed that will work.; Thank you for the pictures and info… I will keep checking marketplace… I might be making a roadtrip back to Florida from Michigan in near future.. so looking at tires on marketplace on way back as well to see if i find anything and hopefully have room. Since there a LOT more Wheelhorse and tractor in general.. parts and tires up north then down here in Florida. Edited 4 hours ago by FLtractor Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Achto 30,135 #12 Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, FLtractor said: courious when you say the 6 ply is more multi purpose than the 8 ply.. The tread pattern on the 6 ply tire that I posted a link to is more versatile. That tire is advertised to work excellent in snow and at the same time it is not supposed to tear up your lawn. The ply of a tire has less to do with versatility than the tread pattern does. All tires will list their ply rating. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FLtractor 88 #13 Posted 2 hours ago (edited) 16 minutes ago, Achto said: The tread pattern on the 6 ply tire that I posted a link to is more versatile. That tire is advertised to work excellent in snow and at the same time it is not supposed to tear up your lawn. The ply of a tire has less to do with versatility than the tread pattern does. All tires will list their ply rating. Ahh good point, the turf vs ag bar ..thank you Edited 2 hours ago by FLtractor 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites