Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.
Golf Balls
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Golf Balls
Just read about using golf balls to balance a tyre
Is this for real ? The theory sounds OK
Is this for real ? The theory sounds OK
On a completely different note, has anyone tried filling their tyres with water (rather then air) to lower the CoG - like they do with tractors that have to operate on steep slopes?
I imagine it wouldn't be very good/unsafe at speed with all that extra weight, but might be OK offroad???
I imagine it wouldn't be very good/unsafe at speed with all that extra weight, but might be OK offroad???
_____________________________________________________________
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
My uncle owns a farm horth of Brisbane - extremely hilly - he and everyone he knows fill their tyres with water - you end up with about 99% water in them and just a tiny bit of air to get them up to the desired pressure. If you don't fill them with water you roll on sideslopes - he has seen it happen.
_____________________________________________________________
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
all the tractors dad and i have owned we have filled the tires with water,,,as said before,,its for stability,,,but we mainly did it for traction,,you really notice a difference when towing gear with the tires filled...
paz
p.s...there was a big discusion on pirate quite a while ago about golf balls in tyres,,,,used to help balance swampers......
paz
p.s...there was a big discusion on pirate quite a while ago about golf balls in tyres,,,,used to help balance swampers......
i wonder if all people are actually as good in the real world as they think they are here in cyberland......one of lifes mysteries i spose....
We use to always fill the tractor tyres with water!
It was quite amazing the amount of extra traction it would achieve!
I have thought of this and the only problem i can see is sometimes when driving a tractor and you either Accelerated or Braked quickly it would really lurch and jump about!
You dont need to fill them full, a touch over 1/2 is all we us to use on the tractors!
The Golf ball thing has been about for a while but why the Fark would you want to run anything bigger than a 35 on the road anyway!
P.S RUFF: I don't know thats a really good Question
It was quite amazing the amount of extra traction it would achieve!
I have thought of this and the only problem i can see is sometimes when driving a tractor and you either Accelerated or Braked quickly it would really lurch and jump about!
You dont need to fill them full, a touch over 1/2 is all we us to use on the tractors!
The Golf ball thing has been about for a while but why the Fark would you want to run anything bigger than a 35 on the road anyway!
P.S RUFF: I don't know thats a really good Question
RoldIT wrote:What's the cubic capacity of a 44" swamper
Me thinks that'd be some mighty unsprung weight to turn
As the tyre turns the water does not necessarily follow the tyre. That is, it is not spinning at the same speed as the tyre.
If the water were say frozen, that would be a different story and would support your theory.
I don't see that it would exert that much more rotational force on the axles.
My ramblings........ :wink:
NICK wrote:taziiy wrote:RUFF wrote:How would you get the golf ball through the valve stem?
u push really really hard they should go in.
is that like using lube?
Let me ask mum.
MY JEEP BUILD
v840 wrote: [Not a shot at Tonka] It's like saying, hell I've got two nuts, I may as well cut one of them off for the hell of it. I ain't using it.[/NAS@T] It's ridiculous!
Aparently the golf balls work sort of well (from the discussions on pirate). Not as good as proper balancing but they definately help. Although they are noisy at slow speeds.
It does look like most of the guys run the water in the front tyres for the really steep type of obstacles. Stops them falling over backwards as much. I think that the biggest downside to the water is that the extra unsprung weight will cause you to break more stuff and on wheel sized obstacles (like steps and small ledges etc) its going to be harder to control a much heaver tyre.
Sam
It does look like most of the guys run the water in the front tyres for the really steep type of obstacles. Stops them falling over backwards as much. I think that the biggest downside to the water is that the extra unsprung weight will cause you to break more stuff and on wheel sized obstacles (like steps and small ledges etc) its going to be harder to control a much heaver tyre.
Sam
the problem is as sam said the unsprung weight, it would kill most axles we are using. These guys are running small radial tyres on super light rigs, and it makes a lot of difference. They also have a lot of axle beef, those yanks are switched on, the toyota axles would probably hate you if you did it. they would hate you a lot! :o
The golf balls thing? man in my 42s it is recommended like 18 golf balls I just stuck in one single house brick and it seems to balance out okay. Same theory, except not as fast of a moving mass. The heavy object (house brick in my case) due to the centrifugal forces, moves to the lowest spot in the tyre, effectively balancing it out, pings at low speed, but good on road manners (handles smooth as glass)!
The golf balls thing? man in my 42s it is recommended like 18 golf balls I just stuck in one single house brick and it seems to balance out okay. Same theory, except not as fast of a moving mass. The heavy object (house brick in my case) due to the centrifugal forces, moves to the lowest spot in the tyre, effectively balancing it out, pings at low speed, but good on road manners (handles smooth as glass)!
hands and mums dont count!!!
Strange Rover wrote:Aparently the golf balls work sort of well (from the discussions on pirate). Not as good as proper balancing but they definately help. Although they are noisy at slow speeds.
It does look like most of the guys run the water in the front tyres for the really steep type of obstacles. Stops them falling over backwards as much. I think that the biggest downside to the water is that the extra unsprung weight will cause you to break more stuff and on wheel sized obstacles (like steps and small ledges etc) its going to be harder to control a much heaver tyre.
Sam
Noise, every time you pull up at a set of lights, you would have to yell "four"
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest