When I bought my 68 Lebaron, I drove a rental car to pick it up from Wiggins Missisippi from Austin TX. The seller assured me the car was sitting on brand new 235/75 tires. When we drove the car around, there was a lot of vibration at highway speeds. The seller was an old mechanic, and he assured me that the tires had flat spots from sitting, and they would improve after a few hundred of miles. As I left for Austin around 6:30 PM (after a 12 hour drive from Austin and a 3-4 hour negotiations and checking). As I was cruising at 75-80 the vibrations got worse, but I could find speeds at which the shaking was sort of acceptable. But it got worse and worse, to the point I had to drive down to 60. Then, the rear tire gave, separated and way out of round. Then I realized the spare was a tiny tire (like a 215 or so) which also gave up quickly. Finding a used tire on I10 in Luisiana at 11:00 at night was not exactly easy. I was back on the road at around 3AM and back to Austin at 9AM. One or two days later, I bought for new tires. The tires with the flat spots never improved as the old timer mechanic promissed me. I have had more cases of tire separation in the other imperial, but these were mostly related to high speed (well over the speed rating of the tires). D^2, 2x68 Quoting Kenyon Wills <imperialist1960@xxxxxxxxx>: > I bought a 1971 car. It had tires that were probably not original. The car > had sat (how did your buddy's car stay at 37k for 20 years? It sat too). I > eperienced "tread seperation" where the rubber blistered off of the metal > inside the tire, flinging rubber everywhere as the tire disintegrated, not > unlike those big rig treads that you see on the side of the road, but I > didn't have 7 or 9 other tires to rely on. > > I was driving the car and it caused me to focus my attention most acutely, as > the car was going about 60 mph. > > It destroyed the metal inside the fender and although not dangerous at the > time (I was going straight), scared me quite a bit. > > I do not trust any tires or brake systems on old cars unless I see a receipt > in the manila file folder that comes with the car. > > I suggest that the money on tires and new soft brake lines is worth every > part of the inconvenience of installing them. Life's short. Don't be cheap > about it. > > -Kenyon >