I did this, too much movement on pallet or bolting to wood deck.. have to bolt to concrete for zero movement... Too much forces to mount new tire will make this setup move making it harder. This worked for 2 tire dismounts for me until crap loosened up.
Considering it's about $40 each time I go to the tire shop to have my rear tires swapped, this budget tire changer has paid for itself so many times over
Uh yeah the mod is the part that makes it work. Tire changer is fine for completely roached out rims and testing your strength. Mod makes the changer actually useful. Trust me I've used it both ways.
So care to tell us where to go to not get ripped off? Oh, and if you're going to suggest diy don't forget to either include the cost of tools necessary to fabricate it or the cost of hiring someone to do it for you.
The only reason I purchased my own is because of greed houri.I was fine with pain $15 to fix a flat tire I.Refuse to pay twenty five dollars to do something I can do for free
That centering cone you bougt is more important than that red 4 point insert. You can just toss that if they both don't fit.
I'm gonna get a pallet too but with wing nuts to easily un-bolt it for easier storage
For ease installing, you have to push the opposite lip of tire down where the least inner diameter of the wheel while moving and inslalling. Try.
The hooked end of your tire tool is for motor cycles. You use the other end with the smooth transmission.
Most important thing is bolting down to concrete get drop in anchors it makes it night and day Mostly. You don't usethe red cross when using cone.
Thankyou for your sharing ideas
The bolts in mine was buried in the packaging material. I Thought they were missing too.
[ can , that tire changer change over size 16" truck tires ]
I did this, too much movement on pallet or bolting to wood deck.. have to bolt to concrete for zero movement... Too much forces to mount new tire will make this setup move making it harder. This worked for 2 tire dismounts for me until crap loosened up.
Yes bolting to concrete is the best way. However, I can't do that, so I chose the free pallet
Bolt it to the concrete for stability. On a pallet? Good chance of getting injured.
Harbor AND Freight! LOL
11:23 What do you mean it's not going to fit? We just saw it on there! 11:11
crazy how the duck bill mod is twice more expensive than the actual tire changer... bro you got ripped off.😂
Considering it's about $40 each time I go to the tire shop to have my rear tires swapped, this budget tire changer has paid for itself so many times over
@@gosteazy thats awesome and im happy for you bro... but you still got ripped off. 😂
It's the way the prices go. Duckbill is usually the more expensive part
Uh yeah the mod is the part that makes it work. Tire changer is fine for completely roached out rims and testing your strength. Mod makes the changer actually useful. Trust me I've used it both ways.
So care to tell us where to go to not get ripped off? Oh, and if you're going to suggest diy don't forget to either include the cost of tools necessary to fabricate it or the cost of hiring someone to do it for you.
You still need a balancer
🤙
There is no and. It's called " Harbor Freight ", lol.
The only reason I purchased my own is because of greed houri.I was fine with pain $15 to fix a flat tire I.Refuse to pay twenty five dollars to do something I can do for free
You don't has a balancing tool...
Drifting on these wheels, no balancing needed
You can add a bubble static balancer to the machine.
Airsoft BBs are cheap....
I pay $2.99 a tire to balance 33" tires for the rest of their life.
@@parkercustoms870you just put them into the valve stem and they roll around? Never heard of this approach. Need to learn more about it
@@jthealy72 bbs won't fit through the air valve.
11:32 Hell yea! Scrape the shit out of that wheel!
Thanks for the comment Joe
@@gosteazy Thank YOU for being so careless.
@@joevarga5982 Thank YOU for the engagement!
@@gosteazy Don't mention it!
To anybody.