When you replace your agricultural tyres, you have the opportunity of boosting your tractor’s capacities at a minimum cost.
Changing tyre size effectively allows you to increase the load capacity considerably without increasing inflation pressure, to improve your traction capacity and reduce soil compaction while continuing to work with heavy implements.
Swapping tyre series for larger tyres, however, must comply with very specific norms in order to obtain an optimal result and get the most from the change.
The first and certainly most important reason is to be able to improve your tractor’s load capacity without having to increase inflation pressure. If you have large sized implements, they tend to be heavier than average, which requires increased inflation pressure to avoid crushing your tyres which will damage them. This is where the problem of soil compaction arises, which can lead to a loss of future yields as a result of too much pressure.
The simplest solution is to change tyre series when you replace your tyres to obtain a greater volume of air in your tyres without changing the height of the wheels. This will allow you to increase the load without needing a higher inflation pressure. Your soil will be protected and you will be able to continue working with wider, heavier implements which will result in a significant improvement in your productivity.
A bigger tyre will see the soil footprint become larger. Engine power is better transmitted to the ground because more studs grip into the earth at the same time. In wet conditions there will be less slip, you will save time in each plot with fuel savings linked to better management of your trailer’s ground adhesion.
If you use VF tyres, the very low pressure will allow you to increase traction capacity even more, while preserving the soil from compaction.
To enable you to interchange your tyres easily, the manufacturers working in Europe set in place a system of standards, starting in the 1960s, within a joint organisation: ETRTO (European Tyre and Rim Technical Organisation). This made it possible to harmonise dimensions, rims, valves, marking, loads, pressure and tyre characteristics.
Any manufacturer wishing to bring about a technical evolution must consult the others, so that everyone can agree and to simplify the possibilities for the end user. Recent evolutions have limited tolerance levels to ensure the compatibility of the tyres between different tyre sizes.
This table of inter-changeability for equivalent sizes is based upon ETRTO Speed Radius Index (SRI) and is for guidance only.
For any change of tyre size it is important to calculate & check the lead / lag percentage and to ensure sufficient height / width clearance of tyre / vehicle combination. Sizes in bold italic text are available from the Firestone Europe range of Agricultural tyres. This table does not include Agro Industrial nor Firestone America Products.
1. Have the same height so that the new tyre, with its larger tread, can be installed on your tractor without any major technical modification.
You can obviously increase the height of the tyres, which would certainly be beneficial for field crop farming, but this implies replacing all 4 tyres and checking that this operation is compatible with the transmission, engine power or overall dimensions of your tractor.
2. Comply with lead/lag rules, which is to say that your front tyres must be perfectly synchronised with your back tyres. As they are not the same size, they do not rotate at the same speed, which can generate a mechanical problem, wear or slip.
To comply with these two criteria, you must refer to the first column (SRI) in the correspondence table above.
The SRI (Speed Radius Index) is a reference value for a group of similar sized tyres, despite having different widths, and which therefore have a similar rotation speed. The tyre’s rotation speed depends on its diameter, which explains why with the same diameter, the tyres can have the right lead ratio adapted to your tractor’s drive ratio.
This is not an obligation and will depend directly on the difference in size between your current tyres and the tyre series which you are hoping to use.
If your original tyre is a standard series 85 tyre, you won’t be able to change to a series 55 tyre without changing the rims. On the other hand, you can go up one size without any problem, for example from series 85 to 70, without having to change your rims (see the table above).
Certain more technological tyres such as VF tyres may have an NRO option (Narrow Rim Option) which allows you to mount wider tyres on rims which would have been too narrow for standard tyres. The suppleness of the sidewalls and the casing design provide greater flexibility and offer you the possibility of changing to larger size tyre technologies, without investing in wide rims.
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: Technical data for agricultural tyres – Agricultural tyre performance – Air pressure advice, Solutions to avoid soil compaction – Sprayer tyre pressure – Why and how to ballast your tractor tyres – etc.
To take it one step further and increase the profitability of your farm, les Experts du pneu provide a free, highly detailed eBook which explains the essential role of the agricultural tyre in your productivity.
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