A little calcium chloride can go a long way, both as freeze protection, and in corrosion. It isn't the big leaks that make for rusted out rims, but the small ones that go unnoticed for months, or the replaced tube put on a rim that got salted that was not thoroughly washed and dried before re-assembly. Even without full "freeze protection", it takes a lotta cold to bring it to 'stiff slush' - not a problem if you don't use the tractor on the very coldest days. Even so, there are better options.
One is iron weights - nothing to leak out of a tire (er, "tyre"), but air, and makes handling tire/rim a WHOLE lot easier when that need arises.
Another is beet juice (in many places called "rim guard") - non toxic, not corrosive, but I'm told it does not mix at all with calcium - it gels.
Washer fluid and used antifreeze (ethylene glycol with a laundry list of other additives) have also been suggested here (and other places), but both are environmentally toxic, even more so than calcium, which will kill vegetation. A hundred gallons of calcium in a field when you poke a tire on an old horse shoe isn't exactly helpful to producing crops on that spot. A hundred gallons of antifreeze or washer fluid spilled is legally required to be reported as a haz-mat spill. I personally don't want to fill a tire with a legal problem waiting to happen, to say nothing about my commitment to making this world a little better for my being here, not worse.
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Today's Featured Article - An Old-Time Tractor Demonstration - by Kim Pratt. Sam was born in rural Kansas in 1926. His dad was a hard-working farmer and the children worked hard everyday to help ends meet. In the rural area he grew up in, the highlight of the week was Saturday when many people took a break from their work to go to town. It was on one such Saturday in the early 1940's when Sam was 16 years old that he ended up in Dennison, Kansas to watch a demonstration of a new tractor being put on by a local dealer. It was an Allis-Chalmers tractor dealership,
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