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tires made a whole new pickup out of it |
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darrel in ND ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Hebron, ND Points: 8718 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 08 Nov 2018 at 9:44am |
My son, being a ford man, had to have the "holy grail" of ford pickups; a 7.3. So about a year and a half ago he found one for a descent price and came home with it. It had some tires on it with grips on them the size of tractor tire lugs and made so damn much noise that I hated riding in it. Well, thank God them tires finally wore out. A few months ago he put some really good BF Goodrich tires on it, and had them put these "balancing beads" in each tire. This morning I brought his pickup up to work, and I absolutely cannot beleive what a difference those tires made. That pickup runs down the road smooth as glass now, and you can even hear yourself think in it. And those balancing beads must really be the answer, because there is not a bit of tire vibration. I can't understand how they work, but as they say, "the proof's in the pudding". Darrel
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CAL(KS) ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 18 Sep 2009 Location: Chapman, KS Points: 3804 |
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i Love my 99 F350 SRW with the 7.3. gets the job done without all the bull
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Me -C,U,UC,WC,WD45,190XT,TL-12,145T,HD6G,HD16,HD20
Dad- WD, D17D, D19D, RT100A, 7020, 7080,7580, 2-8550's, 2-S77, HD15 |
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Ted J ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 05 Jul 2010 Location: La Crosse, WI Points: 18943 |
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I wonder if you could use navy beans? Be worth a try..... Take the tires off YOUR truck Darrel and put some Navy or Northern beans in an let us know how it comes out? (My new stick)
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"Allis-Express"
19?? WC / 1941 C / 1952 CA / 1956 WD45 / 1957 WD45 / 1958 D-17 |
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darrel in ND ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Hebron, ND Points: 8718 |
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Pickup might get bad gas if I put beans in the tires. Darrel
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farmboy520 ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 22 Jun 2016 Location: Beason, IL Points: 553 |
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It'll make the tires swell up lol
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truckerfarmer ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 26 Jan 2013 Location: Watertown, SD Points: 3284 |
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Those balancing beads are the cat's meow. They are what's used to balance steer tires on big trucks. I can vouch for them. Had a new set of steer tires put on once, and they didn't put beads in. Ran it for a week like that. Couldn't hardly keep it on the road. Next weekend they got the needs put in. Made it a whole different truck to drive. I run 2 sizes oversize tires on my pickup an use them. No external weights needed, which I great on aluminum rims. Don't have to worry about losing stick on ones.
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Looking at the past to see the future.
'53 WD, '53 WD45, WD snap coupler field cultivator, #53 plow,'53 HD5B dozer Duct tape.... Can't fix stupidity. But will muffle the sound of it! |
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Thad in AR. ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: Arkansas Points: 9659 |
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I use rideon in my motorcycle tires. Similar to beads but a thick liquid. Smooth as glass.
I like 7.3’s and BF Goodrich tires. |
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desertjoe ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 23 Sep 2013 Location: New mexico Points: 13696 |
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Well,,I can vouch for them beads in the ta'ars for balancing out rough ridin ,,,, On the 2000 F150 my Son is letting me maintain for him,,,,,,,
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DaveKamp ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Apr 2010 Location: LeClaire, Ia Points: 6069 |
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The 7.3 was the absolute best diesel our fleet ever had... it was as simple as a hammer, and although not screaming like the later, more complicated engines, it developed reliable power all the time, even in extreme cold. Our F450's had 'em with Allison transmissions and twin fuel tanks. In winter, we'd run ordinary diesel in both fuel tanks, but we'd put about a gallon of regular (non-ethanol) gasoline in the front tank. Every cold night before shutdown, we'd drive the last three miles home on front tank. They'd pop right on in the morning, and after a few minutes' warmup, and about a mile of driving, flip to the rear tank and be good for the day. The only weakness we had, was a few transmission problems... and probably not unreasonable, as we pulled well-loaded 14K trailers often... but I do think the later Allisons had improvements. We also had one differential that developed some issue, but I can't recall exactly what it was... but I think it may have been a damaged axle seal resulting in low fluid level or something. I don't recall which axle model it was, either. New tires, is like new shoes. Wear the same pair of shoes working on concrete pavement, and after a few weeks, the shoes will wear unevenly, and eventually, your feet, knees, and hips will start to hurt, because your body is all out-of-kilter. Vehicles have same problem... and of course, some tire designs (stiffer sidewalls, more aggressive treads) yield rough ride, tracking, noise, and squirrly handling. My experience has been that the solid-axle Class 4/5 trucks with straight axle and independant suspension have had better treadlife than the TTB suspension... but it's simple, and handles well under most circumstances. On our 450's We generally saw front tire feathering and cupping after about 10,000 miles, so they'd get replaced often, but that would probably have not been the case if we could rotate front to rear. On our duallys, the front tires were identified as 'steer position', while rears were 'drive position only'... so it precluded doing a front-rear. We did have one truck where we experimented with steer-position on rear (duals) as well as front, and the general determination was that it wasn't a worthy investment... better to just replace the fronts and be good with it.
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Ten Amendments, Ten Commandments, and one Golden Rule solve most every problem. Citrus hand-cleaner with Pumice does the rest.
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