Exactly the same way you remove a car tire from its rim. Everything's just bigger.
no
Dynamite
To repair a flat tire you first need to remove the tire from the rim. Once removed inspect the tire for the damager and repair the puncture.
Remove the tire cover (if it has one) remove the wheel lug(s) holding the rim to the mounting bracket - slide the tire off the bracket.
Simply put... YES. In fact, that's what's exactly on my Ford 871 tractor! BTW, a 13.6-28 tire would actually be happiest on a 12" wide rim, but will work on a 10", 11", 12", 13", 14", 15" wide rim. When changing rim widths, what will change is the overall height profile of your tire. It's best to stick with whatever is on the other side. In other words, keep your rear tires AND rims matching sizes if at all possible. Kudos! ~AJ
Take the tire and the rim to a tire shop. It requires special equipment to properly replace the tire and balance the rim.
yes they will but your tire height will lower. if you have 4x4 ratio will be affected
Remove the tire and deflate using a unbolt the guide bolt in the rim using a 2 large screwdrivers pry the tire over the rim on one side being careful not to damage the tube and once one side of the tire is over the rim you can guide the tube out
No, the lettering is molded into the tire, you would have to scrape it pretty hard to remove a letter or letters. A tire machine only touches the outer lip of the tire as it pushes it down under the lip of the rim.
It would be the tread face width by the rim diameter. For instance if you have a 13.6 X 38 tire, which was common on older tractors, it would be 13.6 inches across the tire tread area and 38 inches diameter inside the bead , or 38 inches across the rim to where the tire bead seats which is slightly less than the total distance across the rim.
Its simpler to buy the tire on a rim from lowe's (cheaper than Sears) or use Green Slime fix-a-flat. Getting the tire off the rim requires pushing it in off the rim. They're pretty snug. Rear tires have a key in a groove on the axle, don't lose them.
Probably not. The rim may not clear the brakes.