Tire Wobble

   / Tire Wobble #1  

Jerome

Silver Member
Joined
Sep 28, 2005
Messages
121
Location
Elmvale Ontario Canada
Tractor
Kubota L245dt
I took my Kubota L245DT on the road yesterday and at on point I had significant tire wobble this has not happened before. Was I just going at the certain speed to make the lugs on the tires do this or should I be worried? When I slowed down it stopped.
 
   / Tire Wobble #2  
"Doctor, it hurts when i do this"

Answer: "stop doing it."
Bob
 
   / Tire Wobble #3  
I'd be jacking it up and checking the lug nuts if it were mine. And if they're tight, I'd set something close to the wheel and turn it by hand to see if there was any run out or wobble; looking at both the tire and the wheel.
 
   / Tire Wobble #4  
How old are the tires? As other stated, check the lug nuts first, run-out at the wheel rim second. Another thing that can cause this is a broken bead in the tire. That is the cords/wire bundle that reinforces the bead area of the tire. The one that I experienced also caused the ride to be uneven at road speeds.
 
   / Tire Wobble #5  
If your tractor had sat for a while before hand, you may have had flat spots in the tires which would make the machine wobble (thats a fun ride) and perhaps the tires as well.

Any clue on the condition of the bearings in the tires?
 
   / Tire Wobble #6  
I had this happen to my old Ford 8N. It was worn tie rod ends, As soon as I slowed down the wobble went away, pick up speed to mid throttle in high gear and the wobble returned.
 
   / Tire Wobble #7  
After a second reading of your original post I'm not sure I totally understand your experience. Is it one tire wobbling? Front or rear? Or are BOTH fronts rapidly flopping from left to right in sync with each other; aka shimmy? Steering shimmy goes in & out with a speed change and is usually a problem in the steering linkage, alignment, or PS unit.
OTOH one tire with a wobble with no movement of the steering spindle would be a lug nut/rim runout/tire bead issue and could happen to either front or rear.
 
   / Tire Wobble
  • Thread Starter
#8  
The movement was in both tires/wheels and was transferred through to the steering column. The lugs are tight. It does not happen on gravel. It seems to be the diagonal lugs on the tires.
 
   / Tire Wobble #9  
What Fred said. It sounds like your steering linkage has some worn parts in it or isn't as tight as it should be. Check your toe in, see if you can grab one front wheel and shake it side to side without moving the other one. You should not be able to do that. It could also be wheel bearings. Jack the front end up and make sure the wheels can move in no direction except rotating. You should not be able to shake them by any noticable amount.

The only other possibility I can think of is that someone has put a washer or something under one or two lugs on each wheel, but that's extremely remote and also the things would not be coordinated in their wobble for very long.
 
   / Tire Wobble #10  
I have an l245dt and mine does this on pavement or concrete.It doesn't do it elsewhere.I have ag tires.
 

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