Shran
Junk Collector
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I have a fascination with these walk behind sickle bar mowers - I've used an ancient Master Sickle one from the 40's for a long time but recently traded my way into a Jari Monarch. My dad has about 5 acres of tall grass to cut and that will make quick work of it but unfortunately after getting it running, it threw a tire. These are a really specialized piece, there is a cog gear on each side that drives the tires by way of teeth cut into the rubber so without a tire, the self propel doesn't work. Of course this machine is fairly old and Jari went out of business in 2018 so there are NO parts anywhere.
What to do....................... I first thought about trying to find a piece of conveyor belting or something like that but it occurred to me that maybe I could cut off just the beads of another tire and then put them both on the wheel. A measurement revealed that a 14" tire was too small, 15" was too big, but a 14.5" mobile home tire MIGHT work. So I obtained one and spent several hours trimming the inside of the bead with a utility knife so that it fit very snug on the wheel. I also had to split the wheel - it is spot welded together - and I had to cut the center sleeve with a sawzall. I put the two tire beads on the wheel halves and bolted it back together, then trimmed the rubber to a similar OD as the other wheel.
It looks a little funny and no longer has teeth but the self propel cog really bites into the rubber and it drives itself just fine. I thought about cutting teeth with a tire groover but I'm gonna leave it alone for now. Hope this helps someone else, tech info on these things is hard to find.
What to do....................... I first thought about trying to find a piece of conveyor belting or something like that but it occurred to me that maybe I could cut off just the beads of another tire and then put them both on the wheel. A measurement revealed that a 14" tire was too small, 15" was too big, but a 14.5" mobile home tire MIGHT work. So I obtained one and spent several hours trimming the inside of the bead with a utility knife so that it fit very snug on the wheel. I also had to split the wheel - it is spot welded together - and I had to cut the center sleeve with a sawzall. I put the two tire beads on the wheel halves and bolted it back together, then trimmed the rubber to a similar OD as the other wheel.
It looks a little funny and no longer has teeth but the self propel cog really bites into the rubber and it drives itself just fine. I thought about cutting teeth with a tire groover but I'm gonna leave it alone for now. Hope this helps someone else, tech info on these things is hard to find.