Louis, I my self have the same thought about using modern WW Radials. When I bought my Imperial nearly 10 years ago it came fitted with a set of 235 x 75 x15 Radials. The width of the tire was too much for what was required. Not only the fact of the extra strain that they put on the steering in general , but the turning circle is reduced !. Since then I have stuck with a set of L 78 x 15 WW cokers. The car does not wander & the only steering work that I have done is to replace the inner & outer tie rod ends , & tracked the steering geometry. Even with powersteering I would avoid radials. Regards Dave 60 Le Baron sedan. England. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Louis Rugani" <X779@xxxxxxxxx> To: <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 6:39 AM Subject: [FWDLK] Warning on radial-ply tires: > Radials may be very unsatisfactory on cars designed for bias-ply tires! > The steering geometries are designed for the tires of the time. > I had a set of radials on my '55 Dodge Royal sedan for years, and the > Dodge steered exceedingly hard. > I then went to the correct 7.10x15 bias-ply size .... bingo. It was like > having power steering. Amazing. > The same thing on my '47 Frazer. > > Recommendation: avoid radials on Forward Look cars, unless you have > power steering. > > Regards.... > Lou > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ **-=\/=-** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > The opposite of bravery is not cowardice, but conformity. > - Robert Anthony
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