... I broke the beads on both sides of the rim/tire. The problem is there is no well in the center of the rim for the opposing side of the tire to drop into, allowing slack if you will in the bead, so you can get the bead up, off & over the rim
I’ve read your post several times so it must be my thick Dutch skull that isn’t quite understanding how I could cut the tire bead w/o contacting the wheel using a reciprocating saw ....
Yeah, that 'lack of a well' in the centre of their 'J' type rims is something else BRP may have done to make it harder for 'non-dealers' to change tires

I haven't seen too many '
non-BRP' J type rims that
DON'T have a well in the rim in order to make it easier to remove/fit tires, and almost all of those without a well that I
HAVE seen with this design flaw (or deliberate action for whatever means) have been on Can Am machines! :banghead: :cus:
As for cutting the tire off, I've found that once I've broken the beads (both sides) I can drop the wheel onto the ground on its inner edge, then by using one foot to press the upper bead down into what little well there is and inserting the blade tip from above (at maybe about 80° to the tire tread, so the tip is juuust pointing into what little well there is...

) and using just the tip end of the blade (with the cutting edge facing away from the rim) it lets me cut thru the bead without hitting the rim at all. Sure, it is something that you need to be very careful with while you're first doing it, and if you're not pressing down
hard on your foot on the tire, it can jerk the tire all over the place, but if you've got a good grip on the saw, maybe even got it braced against your other leg, it does work once you grasp the concept & work out how hard to hold it.

hyea: And if you don't do it/hold it properly/hard/tight enough to start with, then because of the angle you're holding the saw at, while I'm pretty sure I've never hit a rim yet, I'd suggest that any 'inadvertent touches' that the saw blade tip
might make on the rim will be inside the well and minor at best,
if it touches/marks at all at all, but as I said, I don't recall ever doing that anyway. :thumbup:
Mind you, IIRC there was a time
waaaay back in about 2013 when I put a small maybe 1" long piece of garden hose split lengthways in one side over the very end of the saw blade, so that it covered maybe almost an inch of the solid back/end bits of the blade that
might touch the rim, not on the blade at all, but I rapidly found that doing that was more trouble than it was worth, and I've never done it since. Your call on that tho. However, if I'm going to be cutting a few tires off rims that I don't want to damage or even touch with the saw blade in any one session, then just to make it a little less 'iffy' if I do get tired of holding the saw so tight, I still
might cut a maybe 10" by 8" section of tread out of the first tire I do for the day (or I cut a section out of any other dead tire that's handy

) and slip it into the little gap formed by pushing the tire bead down into the small well that's exposed, so that my section of cut tread can protect the rim from any inadvertent saw blade touches. Then I do all the cutting
AWAY from the rim - upper side bead, sidewall, & maybe half of the tread first; then flip the wheel over and repeat the process from the other side, still cutting away from the rim all the while! When I'm in the groove, it takes about 30 seconds a tire, but it usually takes me a few to really get into the groove like that... Still, while it might take almost a minute for the first tire in any session, it's still a
LOT easier than trying to get the bead up and over the rim edge, especially when it's on a rim with no well like those on our Spyders. :banghead:
Over to you. :2thumbs: