Hi to all, Sorry, I forgot one other thought. Can't speak for all 300's but on the 300-Fs they did not have any special wheels except that they were made with slightly wider station wagon wheels. There have been many a 300-F owner who got their replacement wheels from junk yards from 1960 station wagons. Tony > From: <cotejohnr@xxxxxxx> > Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 13:04:51 -0500 > To: <awrdoc@xxxxxxxxx>, <george@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Thinner rims? > > Tony, > Old Tire Man (below) states that bias rims are thinner in the bead > area. Does this pertain to our '55 to '65 wheels.? Has anyone put a > micrometer (or other) on the new wheels being made and compared them to > a stock wheel? Does the manufacturer of the new wheels that have been > made for us know both measurements or are we to assume they are just > thicker? > John > > > -----Original Message----- > From: awrdoc@xxxxxxxxx > To: george@xxxxxxxxxxxx; Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 9:07 AM > Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] Danger of wheel failure unless the rims are > > Below is an opinion of an old timer: > that the pressure on >> the bead area of bias ply wheels is greater when they have radial > tires >> mounted on them, what about ³Old Tire Man¹s² quote: >> >> Nickname: Old tire man >> Review: You're neglecting a very important design fact when > comparing radial >> and bias tires and rims: How the load is transferred through the > tire to the >> rim. Radials transfer the load (vehicle + payload) to the bead of > the rim >> and bias transfers the load upwards through the center of the rim, > ie, bias >> rims are thinner at the bead area than radial rims. I was there when > we made >> the transition to radials in the 1970s and I can't tell you how many > bias >> rims I personally have seen 'peeled' at the bead when a radial tire > was >> (wrongly) mounted. I won't mount a radial on a bias designed rim, > but then I >> have many years of personal (in a professional setting) experience > to rely >> on. Safety first. >> Date reviewed: Nov 24, 2006 10:24 PM >> >> This was in reply to an article: >> >> Classiccar.com >> >> A Tale of Two Tires >> A case for radial tires on your classic car >> >> > http://www.businessweek.com/@@WsomwGQQ4NgSUwAA/autos/content/may2006/bw20 > 060 >> 504_512529.htm?chan=autos_classic+cars+index+page_insight > > From: George McKovich <george@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2007 21:25:00 -0700 > To: <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: RE: [Chrysler300] Danger of wheel failure unless the rims are > > Is there anyone with "scientific" evidence that the wheels from > 1955-1962 > were inherently inferior to those built after that period?? Also, is > there > any "scientific" evidence that RADIAL tires put more stress on wheels. > From > the stories that have been related thus far, it looks like there are > more > failures with NON-RADIAL tires being told. I have been told that the > side > walls on a bias-ply tires is stronger than on a radial with a > comparable > number of plies.... I was told this is one reason to use bias-ply > tires on > my car trailer amd they definitely do seem much firmer in the sidewall > areas. Anyone with input??? > > George > > > > _____ > > From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > <mailto:Chrysler300%40yahoogroups.com> > [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > <mailto:Chrysler300%40yahoogroups.com> ] > On > Behalf Of Tony Rinaldi > Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2007 11:52 AM > To: Lettercars@xxxxxxx <mailto:Lettercars%40AOL.COM> ; Pete Fitch; > Chrysler > 300 Club > Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] Danger of wheel failure unless the rims are > > Hi Gil, > > Regarding your awaiting a real tire expert¹s statement that the > pressure on > the bead area of bias ply wheels is greater when they have radial tires > mounted on them, what about ³Old Tire Man¹s² quote: > > Nickname: Old tire man > Review: You're neglecting a very important design fact when comparing > radial > and bias tires and rims: How the load is transferred through the tire > to the > rim. Radials transfer the load (vehicle + payload) to the bead of the > rim > and bias transfers the load upwards through the center of the rim, ie, > bias > rims are thinner at the bead area than radial rims. I was there when > we made > the transition to radials in the 1970s and I can't tell you how many > bias > rims I personally have seen 'peeled' at the bead when a radial tire was > (wrongly) mounted. I won't mount a radial on a bias designed rim, but > then I > have many years of personal (in a professional setting) experience to > rely > on. Safety first. > Date reviewed: Nov 24, 2006 10:24 PM > > This was in reply to an article: > > Classiccar.com > > A Tale of Two Tires > A case for radial tires on your classic car > > http://www.business > > <http://www.businessweek.com/@@WsomwGQQ4NgSUwAA/autos/content/may2006/bw2 > 006 > 0> week.com/@@WsomwGQQ4NgSUwAA/autos/content/may2006/bw20060 > 504_512529.htm?chan=autos_classic+cars+index+page_insight > > Regarding the ³K² wheel covers coming off, there are 2 recesses in the > ³K² > wheel covers that engage the 2 bumps in period Mopar wheels. They are > on > either side of the valve stem. > > Regards, > Tony > > For those that insist on frequent cornering to the limit (not that > there is > anything wrong with that!) I would agree stronger rims would probably > be a > good idea. As to the assertion about the radial side wall flexing > ("twisting") being worse for the rim bead area than bias---I'll await > a real > tire expert's statement before I buy that. > > However, I think that was a function of the "K" wheelcover's one piece > construction more than the wheel. > So there you are---my opinion on the subject and I'm stuck with it! > > 300ly, Gil Cunningham > Chilly Tallahassee, FL > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > ________________________________________________________________________ > Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and > security tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from > across the web, free AOL Mail and more. 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