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Tire recommendations.

emmett518

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2021
Messages
811
Location
USA
Deere 310L .

Any recommendations on tires? The local tire guy asked about how many plys. I had no idea how to answer.

What brands should I look for, and what works well in snow / ice, and mucky barn yard conditions? I'm probably going to do chains for winter on pavement.

Thanks
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,376
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
Welcome to HEF, emmett!
The number of plys is molded on the side of your tires.
You probably should look in the JD parts book for the correct size and plys your 310l came with in case a previous owner downsized them.
A serial number is need to determine what it had when it was new.
If the machine has enough fender clearance you can put bigger than OEM's on it.
Sometimes for some strange reason a tire with more plys will be cheaper than one with fewer.
Price and brands play a major role in your options.
 

emmett518

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2021
Messages
811
Location
USA
The guy who brought his over to work in my area had turf tires, and they had no traction in the mud.
 

Tinkerer

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
9,376
Location
The shore of the illinois river USA
What size and how many plies does it have now ?
Post the tractor serial number and we can look up the OEM size.
19.5L-24 is most likely the size of the rear.
There are 5 different parts book in the progression of the manufacture's serial numbers.
 

cosmaar1

Senior Member
Joined
May 14, 2020
Messages
514
Location
Ohio
I just bought a rear tire for my 555e. It cost about $525 installed on the rim. I had to take off/put it back on myself.
 

emmett518

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2021
Messages
811
Location
USA
What size and how many plies does it have now ?
Post the tractor serial number and we can look up the OEM size.
19.5L-24 is most likely the size of the rear.
There are 5 different parts book in the progression of the manufacture's serial numbers.

1T0310LXAGF296572
 

emmett518

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2021
Messages
811
Location
USA
I just bought a rear tire for my 555e. It cost about $525 installed on the rim. I had to take off/put it back on myself.

How tough was it to handle a back tire and rim? Did you have to use a lift of some sort?
 

cosmaar1

Senior Member
Joined
May 14, 2020
Messages
514
Location
Ohio
As long as you can get the lugs off (I had to use my neighbors 3/4” Milwaukee impact) it’s fairly simple. Use the outriggers to lift off the ground, put a strap around the tire and use the backhoe boom to swing it around and on a trailer. To reinstall do everything in reverse.

It took me about 30 minutes to get it off and the same to put back on. Mind you I did this all by myself and two people would make it a lot easier as you could have them control the boom.
 

ps66x4

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2013
Messages
175
Location
CT
Occupation
cement mason
I think Turf tires are good in snow and ice with chains. I think better then ag tires but I don't know about around the barn.
 

cuttin edge

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2014
Messages
2,736
Location
NB Canada
Occupation
Finish grader operator
Can you get aggricultural tires for a back hoe? Here, for farm tractors, you can get turf, agg, and industrial. I think industrial tires have heavier material and more ply than the agg tires. Probably a lot cheaper, especially if you're just around the farm.
 

berky

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 10, 2017
Messages
84
Location
Indiana
Probably a 19.5 x 24 tire. On a backhoe I would use a 12Ply rated tire. You can get AG-like tires which in my opinion are better than the Industrial tread design. Of course they make a mess in soft soils but have much more pull than IND tires. Some on here may disagree, but I have ran both and in my opinion they are not even close. Too much top tread surface area in IND style but if you run on roads or hard surfaces they will outwear the AG style. I have a set of ACCURET which are a modified R4/AG tread . Love them
 
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