There is more to consider than just the width of the wheel. You have to also consider the offset of the wheel. Considering the same tire diameter, or height, the more offset the wheel has the closer to the fender the outside of the tire will be in a turn. However, the less the offset, the closer to the frame and fender apron the tire will be. Then there is the leverage against the suspension springs. The more offset, the more weight equivalent there is to the springs. This causes the vehicle to sit a little lower than before and will need to have the front end realigned to compensate. Then there is the tire pressure. Considering the same size tire on a wider wheel, you will need to run a little higher pressure to keep the tires from wearing on the edges, as with lower pressure with wider tires on standard wheels to keep them from wearing down the middle of the tread. I think the wires would look good on there but there is a little more to consider first. Just do a little more research with someone who knows tire/wheel specs. Have an Imperial day, Russell Sullivan 1966 Crown Coupe 2 dr ht ----- Original Message ----- From: "Norm" <nsdec@xxxxxxx> To: "Imperial Club" <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, December 26, 2003 9:30 AM Subject: IML: maximum wheel rim width for '55 Imperial? > I'm interested in what width rim will fir on my '55 Imperial, can anyone > confirm or deny that 7" will fit? I have an opportunity for some nice > wires but I'd like to know for sure before buying. Thanks, Norm > > -- > He died from an overdose of brick wall while under the influence of > tequila and a Mercedes: Douglas Adams > >