Blythewoodjoe
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- Blythewood, SC
I have looked and can't find the info I need. First off, I am broke. If I could afford to buy nice new tires for my truck I wouldn't be worried about this.
I have old tires and can't find tires that are not 20 years old in surplus tires. At least not enough for all the axles. So here's the questions:
First off, how much tolerance is there in the sprag unit that engages the front axle on the M818? In other words, how much difference can there be in the diameter of the tires between the front and rear axles? I looked at 4 395/85's today and two looked pretty good and two were worn. I bet there is at least 1.5 inches difference in the diameter. Now imagine if I end up with two for the front that are good and safe but are a little more than that out of size. Is there a standard for this?
Second, is there any way to prevent the axle from engaging? I am under the impression it takes air pressure to engage the transfer case. Not sure. At my age I have so much info in my head it just all runs together. Can a switch be put on the air source to block the air and prevent the sprag from working with out damaging it?
In a nut shell I need to use the truck to move some equipment to make money but I don't have the money to buy all new tires. I have researched commercial tires and I think I can get two bud wheels and used decent tires for less than I can get two 14.00 x 20's for the front axle. I found a source for decent used truck tires about 60 miles away so that has provided a few more options. I am considering getting all 22.5" tires for the truck for road use. This also would be nice if I have a problem out on the road. Having one of these 14.00's go down on the road would be bad. Having something a commercial tire repair shop can fix is good. I would hate to buy a $700 tire on the road, but finding a surplus tire in a bind would be worse.
As a side note, the used tire place I found today had a stack of Michelin XL's that looked nice. They where all over 20 years old. I have cheated death long enough and I don't plan to run tires over 10 years old anymore. We'll see how that works out. If I crash the truck that would be bad, but throwing a $40,000 excavator in the woods would be worse.
Anyway, thanks for the help,
Joe
I have old tires and can't find tires that are not 20 years old in surplus tires. At least not enough for all the axles. So here's the questions:
First off, how much tolerance is there in the sprag unit that engages the front axle on the M818? In other words, how much difference can there be in the diameter of the tires between the front and rear axles? I looked at 4 395/85's today and two looked pretty good and two were worn. I bet there is at least 1.5 inches difference in the diameter. Now imagine if I end up with two for the front that are good and safe but are a little more than that out of size. Is there a standard for this?
Second, is there any way to prevent the axle from engaging? I am under the impression it takes air pressure to engage the transfer case. Not sure. At my age I have so much info in my head it just all runs together. Can a switch be put on the air source to block the air and prevent the sprag from working with out damaging it?
In a nut shell I need to use the truck to move some equipment to make money but I don't have the money to buy all new tires. I have researched commercial tires and I think I can get two bud wheels and used decent tires for less than I can get two 14.00 x 20's for the front axle. I found a source for decent used truck tires about 60 miles away so that has provided a few more options. I am considering getting all 22.5" tires for the truck for road use. This also would be nice if I have a problem out on the road. Having one of these 14.00's go down on the road would be bad. Having something a commercial tire repair shop can fix is good. I would hate to buy a $700 tire on the road, but finding a surplus tire in a bind would be worse.
As a side note, the used tire place I found today had a stack of Michelin XL's that looked nice. They where all over 20 years old. I have cheated death long enough and I don't plan to run tires over 10 years old anymore. We'll see how that works out. If I crash the truck that would be bad, but throwing a $40,000 excavator in the woods would be worse.
Anyway, thanks for the help,
Joe