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Tires slipping on rims

 
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rjdaugh



Joined: 30 Aug 2006
Posts: 195

PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:43 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Rex’s comment about the green slim sealant reminded me of this one.

A local A&P puts tires on with epoxy glue to glue the tires to the rim. You can run low air pressure in the tires with little worry about them slipping on the rim and cutting off the valve stem on the inner tube.

It sounded strange to me at first, but it does make sense. The epoxy works great in shear strength, but with little tensile strength to the rubber, the tires easily come off when you want them too.

Randy



.  



From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Rex Shaw
Sent: Friday, November 10, 2006 6:20 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Buffed down tyres


Rex,
I have an extra set of tires that are the smooth buffed atv tires. I was planing
on using them on my classic 4 when my lawn tractor tires wear out. What was
"shocking" about yours?
Tom Jones
Ellensburg, WA

Tom,

the buffed down tyres were only two ply and they only had to see a grass field and they went flat. My Lawn tractor tyres are 4 ply. I couldn't find tubes for the buffed down tyres and that didn't help. I have 8" steel rims with brake disk lugs welded on the back. This causes slight distortion on the inside and leads to poor sealing without tubes. The buffed down tyres were squirmy at 9-10 lb pressure at times but too tight at higher pressure. I think my slightly smaller Lawn tyres handle excellent at 18 PSI. I used green slime sealant in the buffed down tyres only to find it started attacking the rims. All in all I don't want to see them again. I couldn't put them in the bin fast enough.

                              Rex.
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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:01 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Maybe I'm lucky or just stupid, but I'm running without tubes in my
tires. I have the early Douglas one-piece (welded aluminum) rims, with
Cheng Shin tires, and they are a beast to install or remove. I have one
tire that loses about 4 pounds pressure in about a month's time, so I
keep an eye on that, otherwise no problems so far. I do mostly grass
runways, but if I go to a paved airport, I don't worry about it. I'd
say it's probably a 60-40% mix of the two. Probably my 3-point landings
keeps me slow enough to avoid the dreaded rim slipping.

Lynn
On Friday, November 10, 2006, at 06:42 PM, Randy Daughenbaugh wrote:

Quote:
Rex’s comment about the green slim sealant reminded me of this one.

 

A local A&P puts tires on with epoxy glue to glue the tires to the
rim.  You can run low air pressure in the tires with little worry
about them slipping on the rim and cutting off the valve stem on the
inner tube.

 

It sounded strange to me at first, but it does make sense.  The epoxy
works great in shear strength, but with little tensile strength to the
rubber, the tires easily come off when you want them too.

 

Randy

 

 

 

.          

 

<image.tiff>

Quote:


From:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
[mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf OfRex Shaw
Sent: Friday, November 10, 2006 6:20 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Buffed down tyres

 

Rex,
I have an extra set of tires that are the smooth buffed atv tires.  I
was planing
on using them on my classic 4 when my lawn tractor tires wear out. 
What was
"shocking" about yours?
Tom Jones
Ellensburg, WA

Tom,

         the buffed down tyres were only two ply and they only had to
see a grass field and they went flat.  My Lawn tractor tyres are 4
ply. I couldn't find tubes for the buffed down tyres and that didn't
help. I have 8" steel rims with brake disk lugs welded on the back.
This causes slight distortion on the inside and leads to poor sealing
without tubes. The buffed down tyres were squirmy at 9-10 lb pressure
at times but too tight at higher pressure. I think my slightly smaller
Lawn tyres handle excellent at 18 PSI. I used green slime sealant in
the buffed down tyres only to find it started attacking the rims. All
in all I don't want to see them again. I couldn't put them in the bin
fast enough.

                                                                       
                                                                       
                                                                       
                         Rex.

 

 

www.aeroelectric.com

www.kitlog.com

http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List

 




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Lynn
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:42 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Does the green slime affect aluminum rims or just steel.
[quote][b]


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JimmieBlackwell(at)austin
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:56 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Two of here in the Austin, Texas area are using the exact same tire as Lynn.
We have about 600 hours between the two of us and have never had a probem.
lMost of our flying is on paved runways. We use 14 lbs prssure.

Jimmie
---


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Float Flyr



Joined: 19 Jul 2006
Posts: 2704
Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland

PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 6:31 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

I've been reading the mail on this one for a day or so now. I find it a bit
amazing that you guys are getting tire slippage on the rim. There are only
two ways that I can see of getting slippage; 1. the rims are extremely
heavy and when you touch down that causes the tires to slip on the rims.
Rims that heavy would be too heavy to fly. That brings me to the second
reason 2. There must be some pretty heavy braking going on. Especially with
low pressures on soft surfaces.

One of these days I'll try those funny round things, currently stored in the
back of my shop, on my plane. In the meantime do not archive the fact I
like floats!

Noel

[quote] --


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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Sat Nov 11, 2006 5:42 am    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Are you using tubes, Jimmie?

Lynn

On Friday, November 10, 2006, at 08:55 PM, Jimmie Blackwell wrote:

[quote]
<JimmieBlackwell(at)austin.rr.com>

Two of here in the Austin, Texas area are using the exact same tire as
Lynn. We have about 600 hours between the two of us and have never had
a probem. lMost of our flying is on paved runways. We use 14 lbs
prssure.

Jimmie
---


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Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 11, 2006 4:32 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

No tubes.

Jimmie
---


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dwight purdy



Joined: 10 Feb 2006
Posts: 85

PostPosted: Sat Nov 11, 2006 9:36 pm    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

I also run with no tubes. The tire shop puts a black goo on. No problems in
550 hours.

Dwight Purdy

At 07:57 PM 11/10/2006 -0500, you wrote:

Quote:


Maybe I'm lucky or just stupid, but I'm running without tubes in my
tires. I have the early Douglas one-piece (welded aluminum) rims, with
Cheng Shin tires, and they are a beast to install or remove. I have one
tire that loses about 4 pounds pressure in about a month's time, so I
keep an eye on that, otherwise no problems so far. I do mostly grass
runways, but if I go to a paved airport, I don't worry about it. I'd
say it's probably a 60-40% mix of the two. Probably my 3-point landings
keeps me slow enough to avoid the dreaded rim slipping.

Lynn
On Friday, November 10, 2006, at 06:42 PM, Randy Daughenbaugh wrote:

>Rex's comment about the green slim sealant reminded me of this one.
>
>A local A&P puts tires on with epoxy glue to glue the tires to the
>rim. You can run low air pressure in the tires with little worry
>about them slipping on the rim and cutting off the valve stem on the
>inner tube.
>
>It sounded strange to me at first, but it does make sense. The epoxy
>works great in shear strength, but with little tensile strength to the
>rubber, the tires easily come off when you want them too.
>
>Randy
>
>.
<image.tiff>
>From:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
>[mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf OfRex Shaw
>Sent: Friday, November 10, 2006 6:20 PM
>To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
>Subject: Buffed down tyres
>
>Rex,
>I have an extra set of tires that are the smooth buffed atv tires. I
>was planing
>on using them on my classic 4 when my lawn tractor tires wear out.
>What was
>"shocking" about yours?
>Tom Jones
>Ellensburg, WA
>
>Tom,
>
> the buffed down tyres were only two ply and they only had to
>see a grass field and they went flat. My Lawn tractor tyres are 4
>ply. I couldn't find tubes for the buffed down tyres and that didn't
>help. I have 8" steel rims with brake disk lugs welded on the back.
>This causes slight distortion on the inside and leads to poor sealing
>without tubes. The buffed down tyres were squirmy at 9-10 lb pressure
>at times but too tight at higher pressure. I think my slightly smaller
>Lawn tyres handle excellent at 18 PSI. I used green slime sealant in
>the buffed down tyres only to find it started attacking the rims. All
>in all I don't want to see them again. I couldn't put them in the bin
>fast enough.
>
>
>Rex.
>
>www.aeroelectric.com
>
>www.kitlog.com
>
>http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List
>

--
1:40 PM


--
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 5:36 am    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

I have 660+ hours on my KFIV, all with Chen Seng buffed tires, no tubes and no slippage. 90% of landings are on pavement.

This is my 4th set of tires and after the first change; I started going to a local ATV shop to have the tires changed (he can also balance them, but I've not done it yet - will try for the next set). Its a bargain not to have the hassle or worry about a tire shop bending the rims - which happened the one time I went to a tire shop.

Harold
[quote][b]


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FlyboyTR



Joined: 04 Nov 2006
Posts: 215
Location: Mobile, Alabama

PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 7:46 am    Post subject: Re: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Way back when... I had problems with the tires slipping on the rims. We always ran very low air pressure (very rough field). Our fix was to drill six equally spaced holes in the bead of the rim (both sides). Then we carefully screwed in a #6X3/8 stainless sheet metal screw. They were never long enough to go all the way through the bead of the tire, but provided enough grip to STOP the tire from slipping on the rim.

Travis Smile


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Lynn Matteson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 2778
Location: Grass Lake, Michigan

PostPosted: Thu Nov 16, 2006 5:15 am    Post subject: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Aha! Shades of early drag racing....I used to do the same thing with
slicks on my dragster and low tire pressures.

Lynn
do not archive
On Wednesday, November 15, 2006, at 10:46 AM, FlyboyTR wrote:

Quote:


Way back when... I had problems with the tires slipping on the rims.
We always ran very low air pressure (very rough field). Our fix was
to drill six equally spaced holes in the bead of the rim (both sides).
Then we carefully screwed in a #6X3/8 stainless sheet metal screw.
They were never long enough to go all the way through the bead of the
tire, but provided enough grip to STOP the tire from slipping on the
rim.

Travis Smile

--------
Travis Rayner
Mobile, AL
Skystar Vixen
N-789DF


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FlyboyTR



Joined: 04 Nov 2006
Posts: 215
Location: Mobile, Alabama

PostPosted: Thu Nov 16, 2006 12:31 pm    Post subject: Re: Tires slipping on rims Reply with quote

Lynn,
Actually that's were I picked it up at years ago. Baby powder can be used between the tire and the tube. It acts as a lubericant between the tire and the tube (they don't stick together) This can help with slipping tires. I use baby powder on all applications that have tubes.

Travis

do not archive


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