Tyres have continued to evolve constantly since the invention of the agricultural tyre by Harvey Firestone in 1930, the tyre having never ceased to adapt to serve the needs of farmers better.
Over long periods of time, trends take shape which make it possible to define exactly what works best and what allows you to really improve productivity and yields. This kind of information lets you know what the current trends are on the agricultural tyre market and helps you to make an enlightened choice, if you wish to renew your tyres.
The world population has gone from 3 billion people in 1960 to more than 7.5 billion today. At the same time, the average level of cereal production in the world increased from 217 kilos per inhabitant in 1963 to 354 kilos per inhabitant in 2013, which is an increase of around 65% in 50 years.
Agricultural equipment follows this evolution of demand and has brought about changes in social structure and productivity in farms.
The transition has taken place over several decades in western countries where family farms with staff and lots of light operating equipment have become family farms with few staff, equipped with heavy powerful equipment, the change coming about at the level of the machines which have led to a major increase in productivity.
The tyre is no exception and has followed the evolution of machines with new requirements linked to the constantly increasing weight of the tractors and the desire to avoid soil compaction, which would be counterproductive, as much as possible.
Iron star wheels
Harvey Firestone invents the agricultural tyre, 2-wheel drive tractors are equipped with diagonal structure tyres
First appearance of the radial structure tyre for 2-wheel drive tractors
4-wheel drive tractors appear equipped with diagonal structure tyres
4-wheel drive tractors may be equipped with radial structure tyres
First appearance of low-pressure radial structure tyres with IF or VF technology
First appearance of autonomous tractors, connected devices and onboard artificial intelligence
There are three main periods in the evolution of agricultural tyres:
In short, a major improvement in productivity for all crop farming farms.
Trends evolved throughout the 1990s, leaning towards larger tyres to increase the size of the soil footprint, making it possible to improve traction while limiting soil compaction with a better load distribution over a larger contact patch with the ground.
Tyres went from 85-series, commonly used before the 1980s, to larger 70-series, then from the 1990s, 65-series to increase the soil footprint even more.
This evolution in series made it possible to improve the tractors’ traction capacity without changing the height of the tyres, thus optimising productivity and saving time on each campaign.
From the year 2000 onwards, high volume extra-large XL tyres marked an important change, moving towards increasingly higher tyres. The advantage of this evolution also lies in the improvement of traction thanks to tyres with a longer soil footprint. As more lugs grip the soil at the same time, the optimal transmission of engine power to the ground makes it possible to increase speed.
Rims followed the natural tyre evolutions, first by expanding to correspond to the increase in width which really began in the 1990s with the changes in tyre series. 10 years’ ago, the maximum diameter was 38 inches on most tyres intended for crop farming, then with the evolution in tyre height 42 inch rims became common and today you easily find 46 inch rims which give you high-volume tyres that are over 2 metres tall.
However, there are natural limits to this evolution, because with such high tyres the centre of gravity of the tractors moves upwards, leading to problems of stability and requiring the use of duals in large farms to be able to continue increasing power and productivity.
However, with this level of investment, this type of equipment is restricted to the largest farms and does not concern most agricultural undertakings.
Tyres are the link between the ground and the machine, they are a crucial element in transmitting power to the ground. It’s this contact with the ground which is important and which may allow the tyre to transmit information (if the technology of the captors in the tyre is sophisticated enough) such as the temperature, the pressure, the type of soil, the humidity rate, the degree of rubber wear, etc.
This type of information can be transmitted to the cab to allow farmers to adapt their behaviour, or in the event of the evolution towards autonomous tractors; so that the machine can adapt its settings in real time without stopping production.
TPMS: this corresponds to a first level of information which, thanks to pressure captors placed in each tyre, makes it possible to collect information in the cab in real time. Each TPMS (Tire Pressure Monitoring system) captor sends pressure information on each tractor tyre. This makes it possible to detect any loss of pressure and anticipate a problem, or work at low pressure to avoid soil compaction. This TPMS together with a remote inflation system (CTIS described below) allows you to change pressure while driving to adapt to the nature of the ground encountered.
CTIS: (Central Tyre Inflation System) is an inflation system which allows you to control the air pressure in each of the tractor tyres, to improve performance on the road or in the fields. By reducing pressure when entering the field, the soil footprint gets bigger, increasing the bearing capacity on wet soil, reducing compaction and improving traction.
RFID chips: (Radio-Frequency Identification chips) These may be incorporated in agricultural tyres These chips give you access to general information on the tyre, such as its unique identification code, its dimensions, pressure recommendations based on the official load index and speed rating table.
The Bridgestone-agriculture.eu blog is written and administered by tractor tyre experts who are available to provide you with the advice you need on the subject of your agricultural tyres. They allow you to maximise your productivity with information on all subjects linked to tyres: Cheap tractor tyres — Technical data for agricultural tyres — Air pressure advice — Solutions to avoid soil compaction — Sprayer tyre pressure — Why and how to ballast your tractor tyres — When to use dual wheels — The mechanical causes of abnormal wear — Cheap agricultural tyres – etc.
To learn more and boost your farm's profits, Bridgestone-Agriculture is offering you a free, detailed white paper that explains the essential role your agricultural tyres play in your productivity.
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