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
It will, that does not mean you should. You really need a 12.4-28 or a 13.6-28.
the car tire will be flat and the tractor tire not.
You can check you tractor manual to get the tractor tire tubes correct measurements. You can also check with tractor supply stores to find the right tire tubes for your tractor model.
When you turn the front wheels, they skid sideways as they turn. The skidding wears rubber off the tire.
The V design in tractor tire treads are designed to give you more traction, more pulling power while going forward.
The size of the back tractor tire on the 4430 JD tractor is 18.4-38.
That reads more like a model number for a tire than a tire size. Tire size would be something like 275/75R22.5, 285/80R22.5, etc.
The size of the back tractor tire on the 4430 JD is 18.4-38. The size of the tire on a John Deer 4430 farm tractor is 20.8-34.
depends on how big? a rear compact tractor tire 11.2x24 is about$250 if you get an irrigation tire same seize about $130
That all depends on the size of the wheel. A 26-inch bicycle tire rolls 6ft 10in in one revolution. A 7-ft tractor tire rolls 22ft in one revolution
inflated, or deflated? what ambient temperature? deflated and at -260 degrees they are about 34" in diamter and 6 inches wide.
15.5x38 Tractor tire