A couple of years ago I replaced my bias Remington's with Diamondback radials(had to do this twice as on the first set the whitewalls all turned brown). I had ordered them by phone and when they arrived by UPS, I threw them in my B and headed for the local tire store to have them mounted. Mind you this was a store called Wheel Works and they were one of many stores of a large chain of tire stores who you would assume would know something about tires and TUBES. Of course I made my way to the repair and mounting area to watch the procedure of mounting and balancing. I first had to show them the technique for removing hubcaps from wirewheels(if there is a technique). I then had to show these young guys doing the job(among 6 employees including the supervisor, not one knew how to mount a tube into a tire) how to do it. We got the tube into the first tire and when they went to fill it with air, I asked them to remove the valve core. I was asked why by one of them. I told them that the idea was to fill the tire until the beads seated and then to let all the air out of the tire and then we would replace the core and fill it to proper pressure. When I told them that we did this to allow the tube to orient itself properly in the tire with no pinches or twists, one of them said "oh yea". I then asked them to balance the tires/wheels without placing weights on the outside and still maintaining some semblance to both static and dynamic balance. The whole process took about 2 hours and cost me 70.00. I do not believe that they looked at this as a money making proposition but I think that a couple of them were quite fascinated to learn what we all had to do in the old days to mount tires on our cars. I was quite pleased to have been there and supervised them as I would hate to think what may have happened to my car if all I had done was just dropped the car off and told them to replace the tires that were on the ground with those that were in the trunk and to call me when the job was done. The car got a lot of interest from all the employees and the customers who were there having tires mounted on there cars. I am not a big fan of tubes however. They are very heavy( unsprung weight and I think can really throw off getting a proper balance), they do build up heat especially in radials(as noted elsewhere) and if you do pick up a nail you are assured of a flat(tubeless can often run for quite sometime with a nail and lose no pressure--we have probably experienced first learning of a nail in your tire by the click/click made as it rotates), I suspect they would lower the DOT speed rating of a tire(this is just idle speculation on my part) and they cannot be plugged in an emergency if you should pick up a nail. I would like to run tubeless on my wires, but do not have much faith in any method of ensuring that leaks will not occur around the spoke nipples. Roger Schaaf 300 B Calif ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ray Jones" <hurst300@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: <macthehammer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: "Listserver" <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, January 03, 2005 3:44 PM Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] Causion There are tubes made for Radials. They are thicker and have ribs molded on them as I recall. Ray Ray Jones, Mena, AR in the Ouachita Mountains in western Arkansas Y'all com'on down and we'll sit ona porch and sip a few. On Jan 3, 2005, at 5:01 PM, James McMullan wrote: > Radial tires by designed flex more.They run slightly flat so build > more heat.If you use a tube in a tire that not designed for a tube you > will cause recessive heat build up.That will destroy the tire .Jim > McMullan 300 F calif. > > > James McMullan > macthehammer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Why Wait? Move to EarthLink. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > To send a message to this group, send an email to: > Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > For list server instructions, go > tohttp://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Sponsor > > ADVERTISEMENT > <image.tiff> > <image.tiff> > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > . To visit your group on the web, go to: > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/ > > . To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > Chrysler300-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > . Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to theYahoo! Terms of Service. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm Yahoo! 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