corleone
New member
Hello,
I've been reading as many posts on the topic of mixing R1 and R4 tires. Specifically, I'm interested in running an R1 rear with R4 front. From the Titan data book, I looked up tire data on both. I have a 2013 DK45SE, so these numbers are specific to the tires I can run.
R1 tires
Front 10x16.5/6 Diameter - 30.4", Rolling Circ. - 91", Tread depth - 21/32" (0.65625"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 29.0875"
Rear 14.9x24/8 Diameter - 48.9", Rolling Circ. - 145", Tread depth - 32/32" (1"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 46.9"
Ratio of front to rear rolling circ. - 0.62758"
Taking into account tread depth. Ratio of front to rear rolling circ (minus tread) - 0.62020"
R4 tires
Front 8x16/6 Diameter - 30.5, Rolling Circ. - 91", Tread depth - 31/32" (0.96875"). Rolling circ. minus tread depth - 28.3625"
Rear 13.6x24/6 Diameter - 47.9", Rolling Circ. - 143, Tread depth - 46/32" (1.4375"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 45.0250"
Ratio of front to rear rolling circ. - 0.63636"
Taking into account tread depth. Ratio of front to rear rolling circ (minus tread) - 0.63437"
When attempting to determine an R1 tire to use with the R4 front - what needs to be taken into account? ...is it just the rolling circumference? ...or the bearing surface below the tread (rolling circ. minus tread)?
Both the R1 and R4 front tires listed above have a rolling circ. of 91". If that was all that mattered, they should be okay to swap back and forth without any issues. I assume it's more challenging than than. And I don't really know the answers either.
I run a FEL and I would like to keep the R4 front tires for this reason. My land gets really muddy with thick sticky clay so I'd like to have the R1 for that as well as extra grip for ground-engaging tools.
Am I drifting into areas that are better to avoid? I don't need to be snapping u-joints or worse...
But this whole problem seems like it should be easy to solve unless the answer is to use a tire that doesn't exist (which would make it all a little difficult).
I'm looking for any/all opinions on this issue. Thank you all for your time.
I've been reading as many posts on the topic of mixing R1 and R4 tires. Specifically, I'm interested in running an R1 rear with R4 front. From the Titan data book, I looked up tire data on both. I have a 2013 DK45SE, so these numbers are specific to the tires I can run.
R1 tires
Front 10x16.5/6 Diameter - 30.4", Rolling Circ. - 91", Tread depth - 21/32" (0.65625"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 29.0875"
Rear 14.9x24/8 Diameter - 48.9", Rolling Circ. - 145", Tread depth - 32/32" (1"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 46.9"
Ratio of front to rear rolling circ. - 0.62758"
Taking into account tread depth. Ratio of front to rear rolling circ (minus tread) - 0.62020"
R4 tires
Front 8x16/6 Diameter - 30.5, Rolling Circ. - 91", Tread depth - 31/32" (0.96875"). Rolling circ. minus tread depth - 28.3625"
Rear 13.6x24/6 Diameter - 47.9", Rolling Circ. - 143, Tread depth - 46/32" (1.4375"). Rolling circ minus tread depth - 45.0250"
Ratio of front to rear rolling circ. - 0.63636"
Taking into account tread depth. Ratio of front to rear rolling circ (minus tread) - 0.63437"
When attempting to determine an R1 tire to use with the R4 front - what needs to be taken into account? ...is it just the rolling circumference? ...or the bearing surface below the tread (rolling circ. minus tread)?
Both the R1 and R4 front tires listed above have a rolling circ. of 91". If that was all that mattered, they should be okay to swap back and forth without any issues. I assume it's more challenging than than. And I don't really know the answers either.
I run a FEL and I would like to keep the R4 front tires for this reason. My land gets really muddy with thick sticky clay so I'd like to have the R1 for that as well as extra grip for ground-engaging tools.
Am I drifting into areas that are better to avoid? I don't need to be snapping u-joints or worse...
But this whole problem seems like it should be easy to solve unless the answer is to use a tire that doesn't exist (which would make it all a little difficult).
I'm looking for any/all opinions on this issue. Thank you all for your time.