Re: My additional "5 cents worth" Re: [Chrysler300] tires
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Re: My additional "5 cents worth" Re: [Chrysler300] tires





The problem for me is I know Michelin are so much better than all these other tires in speed rating and performance that I have a hard time not going black wall and getting the   best engineered tire made . Probably also the safest and it lasts 60k . The past few sets of Michelin I bought needed zero weights. None  at all . That says volumes about precision manufacturing . Diamond back was supposed to put whitewalls on Michelin , but unsure if that hurts them in any way . And I love you tomorrow applies to them. 
So we have looks vs real performance . I kind of like the look of the Andy Granatelli F going 180 on blackwall moon discs ( ok you can stop laughing )   Or the Kiekhoffer B .  On Imperial wheels.   ; lately I put “trim rings “ on larger black wheels and was looking at some way to mount F gear in middle ; this also allows 16” or 17 x 8 or 9 wheels and tires and a whole host of improvements in the way the car drives —with lower  profile tires of about the same  OD  .  Growing up in the era , wide whites were associated with Buicks and Cads . Chrysler had real race tires , Blue Streaks .  Not wide whites. 409 or max wedge were black walls and dog  dish. I guess it is the image one wants for his car    . Zero criticism , just thoughts. I like the race heritage more than Luxo barge look of a Buick ( or New Yorker )  .  Like the race B look too . 
Last —weights can balance a tire rotationally any where ( add weight to place that is light , you can do yourself on the car ) — all they had , generally, in 60’s ...  but if off axis in and out of the plane of the center of gravity of the tire ( and imbalance typically IS in and out too) you add a new problem you can envision as a “wobble balance “ in and out while having a perfect rotary balance . So splitting is best or computer tells you the split % (  on a special spin balance  machine)    . That said if you need no weights you have no wobble . And even more of “ that  said” most of my cars have American Classics especially C, D . If I had one , E. But F starts a new period... 
to each his own is a great part of our club — I remember some early days   performance prone characters ( Chic Kramer comes to mind) who drove   fairly ratty 300’s hard —on black walls, and their 300 was a lot faster than yours . George was a bit like that . I get that, and like it;   but sadly cars are ? too valuable now.. maybe.  Best day of my life was when 62 H turned the fastest time at 62 NHRA drags ( 12.9!) , besting 409 Chevy and 421 Pontiac .with an automatic! First 727. ( lost to  Pontiac  in the last race , guy was asleep at light) That is a 300. Big heavy and for real fast . Chrysler engineering prowess . 
Sent from my iPhone not by choice 

On 29 Jul 2019, at 2:05 am, 'Rich Barber' c300@xxxxxxx [Chrysler300] <Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

For appearance sake, I directed my tire guy at the time to mount all weights on the inside of the 15” OEM Motor Wheel wire-spoke wheels.  H said he would, but the wheel would not be dynamically balanced. I ran those old Bias-ply Remington’s a lot of miles at high speed and never felt any pronounced out-of-balance sensation.  I believe the computerized wheel balancer directs the technician how much weight and where, ,including inside or outside.  I don’t understand the physics of splitting the weights inside and/or outside but there must be a good reason.  Tire and wheel guys:  What, if anything do we lose by placing all weights on the inside?  And, why split the weights inside and out anyway?

 

Rich Barber

Brentwood, CA 105F today.

 

From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx On Behalf Of Noel Hastalis cpaviper@xxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]
Sent: Sunday, July 28, 2019 9:59 PM
To: Curtis Roys <curtisaroys@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Chrysler300 <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: My additional "2 cents worth" Re: [Chrysler300] American Classic radial tires

 

 

Curtis and Group,

 

One final 'road-tested' comment from me re the 235/75R14 American Classics I'm running on my 300-F. Just drove back to Chicago from our wonderful Minneapolis Fall Meet tonight - have now put 4,300+ miles on my tires since having them mounted on the F's stock 14"x6.5" steel wheels in April, a few days before heading down to Texas for our Spring Meet. Homeward bound through northern Wisconsin, with strong crosswinds and torrential rain for 100+ miles tonight, in addition to the heavy rains I encountered for a good part of the trip to/from Dallas, these tires have performed very well. There's no sense of fighting the car to keep it stable through these heavy downpours. I'm very happy with their performance.

I purchased my 4 tires through a Coker special promotion at a Mecum auction last fall - cost including free shipping and road hazard warranty was about $1,040. Whitewalls are 2 1/2". If your purchase them, be sure to read the online instructions for mounting - including the recommendation that wheel weights be only mounted on the insides of the rims, so as to not blemish the whitewalls.

 

Noel Hastalis

Burr Ridge, IL

 

On July 28, 2019 at 8:00 PM EMills_ATC <millserat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Sorry for late reply - probably already solved, but here are some data I have compiled from 1960's to 2015 on tires.

First I will list 8.00-14 as it evolved to P215/75R14 (P/225/70R14), noting that P215/75R14 is largest 14 inch whitewall (Narrow White) in current full scale production as of 2019. (Hankook Optima H724 price around $65-80). There are other specialty tires ($200-300 range) including 8.00-14, G78-14, and P215/75 R14 including wide whitewalls, but for the most part these are limited production specialty runs, in some cases using outdated equipment. There is also an American Classic in P235/75R14 in whitewall (Wide and Narrow White?).

I will note that in early days, to provide a soft ride, tire design was based on 24 psi, frequently with note in fine print to increase pressure (up to 32 psi) for sustained high speed or increased load. If I recall correctly the 24 psi assumed driver plus 2 passengers and 1 suitcase. Anything more moved you to higher load. And Speed limits were mostly assumed to be 60 mph. Later load capacities were based on 32 psi, and most current standard load range radials are based on 44 psi - so dont assume load ratings are directly comparable - and it your rims are old beat up rusty things, dont assume you can go to 44 psi safely.

Also, belted and later radial tires tend to have more flexible sidewalls and give lower ride height for a given diameter. This is reflected in the SLR (Static Loaded Radius) column if I had any data from manufacturers data sheets. Most likely your 8.50-14 had a SLR of about 13 in, while a P215/75R14 would be closer to 12 inches and even the P235/75R14 is likely to be only 12.5 to 12.6 inches, hence lowering the car about a half inch despite being oversize to the P225/75R14 equivalent to the original 8.50-14

Second I will list the 8.50-14 to P225/75R14 specifications as these are more likely applicable to C-body cars. Unfortunately the last P225/75R14 I know of were produced by Cooper in 2006.

Lastly I will provide data for 9.00-14 to P235/75R14 - again, I believe the American Classic is currently available in the P235/75R14 as of 2019.

 

SIZE

MFG

TYPE

Sidewall

OD

LOAD

RPM

LR

SWid

RimW

TWid

SLR

Cost

Source

8.00-14

BFG

Deluxe Silvertown (3-60 Mfg Spec)

27.54

1175@24

7.5

5.5

4.53

12.79

??

1960 BFG

8.25-14

GoodYear

Power Cushion (Mfg Spec)

27.56

1380@24

8.2

6

??

??

??

1967 Goodyear

205R14

Michelin

XWW (Mfg Spec)

26.9

1620

778

8.1

6

??

12

??

Michelin 1979

G78-14

General

Belted Jumbo 780 (OE)

27.27

8.54

6

??

12.47

??

General 1971

GR78-14

Michelin

XWW (Mfg Spec)

26.8

1620

782

8.4

5.5

??

11.8

??

Michelin 1979

P215/75R14

Michelin

X (Mfg Spec)

26.8

1665

776

8.7

6

??

11.9

??

Michelin 1985

P215/75R14

Hankook

H724

NW

26..7

1664

778

98S

8.5

6

5.3

??

$81

Hankook 2014

P215/75R14

American Classic

NW

26.69

1664

98S

8.5

??

5.68

??

??

Coker 2014

P215/75R14

Toyo

Extensa A/S

Black

26.7

1664

778

98S

8.3

12.0

Toyo 2014

225/70R14

Hankook

H725

Black

26.3

1675

789

98T

8.9

6.5

6.6

??

??

Hankook 2014

225/70R14

General

Altimax RT43

Black

??

??

??

225/70R14

Cooper

Cobra GT

RWL

26.27

1675

8.92

6.5

7.2

??

??

??

225/70R14

BFG

RedLine

Red

26.3

1675

8.9

??

6.7

??

$186

Coker

 

SIZE

MFG

TYPE

Sidewall

OD

LOAD

RPM

LR

SWid

RimW

TWid

SLR

Cost

Source

8.50-14

BFG

Deluxe Silvertown (3-60 Mfg Spec)

28.3

1265@24

7.86

5.5

4.73

13.07

??

1960 BFG

8.50-14

Firestone

Deluxe Champion (3-61 Mfg Spec)

28.4

1265

8.04

5.5

??

13

??

1961 Firestone

8.55-14

GoodYear

Power Cushion (Mfg Spec)

28.24

1510@24

8..5

6

??

??

??

1967 Goodyear

8.55-14

General

Jet-Air II Rayon

28.26

8.54

6

??

12.81

??

General 1971

8.55-14

BFG

Deluxe Silvertown Coker

28.1

1740

8.35

??

4.75

??

??

Coker

215R14

Michelin

XWW (Mfg Spec)

27.4

1770

765

8.4

6

??

12.2

??

Michelin 1979

HR78-14

Michelin

XWW (Mfg Spec)

27.5

1770

759

8.9

6

??

12

??

Michelin 1979

H78-14

General

Belted Jumbo 780 (OE)

27.85

8.8

6

??

12.65

??

General 1971

H78-14

coker

coker

WW

27.6

1770

8.86

??

5.75

??

??

Coker

HR78-14

Phillips66

used

NW

27.45

8.75

6

6

??

C300

??

P225/75R14

Michelin

X (Mfg Spec)

27.6

1795

757

8.9

6

??

12.1

??

Michelin 1985

P225/75R14

Firestone

721 Steel Belted Radial

NW

27.35

9

6

6.15

12

??

Firestone 10-86

225/75R14

Cooper

TrendsetterSE

NW

27.05

1797

8.7

6

5.6

??

??

Cooper 2006

H70-14

GoodYear

Speedway WT (Mfg Spec)

27.78

1510@24

764

9.1

6

6.81

??

??

1967 Goodyear

P235/70R14

Firestone

SS Radial

26.66

8.85

6.5

6.27

11.54

??

Firestone 10-86

 

SIZE

MFG

TYPE

Sidewall

OD

LOAD

RPM

LR

SWid

RimW

TWid

SLR

Cost

Source

9.00-14

BFG

DS (3-60 Mfg Spec)

28.8

1355@24

8.25

6

4.93

13.26

??

1960 BFG

9.00-14

Firestone

DC (3-61 Mfg Spec)

29

1355

8.53

6

??

13.2

??

1961 Firestone

9.00-14

BFG

DS Coker

NW

28.68

8.8

??

4.8

??

$184

Coker

8.85-14

General

Jet-Air II Nygen

28.3

8.96

6

??

12.99

??

General 1971

8.85-14

BFG

DS Coker

NW

28.68

1860

8.8

??

4.8

??

??

Coker

J78-14

General

Dual S-90 Sidewinder

??

28.24

9

6

12.81

??

General 1971

J78-14

GoodYear

OE Polyglas

DW

28.2

??

67 NY

measured 67 NY

235/75R14

American Classic

NW

27.87

1930

104S

9.25

??

6.3

??

??

Coker 2014

245/70R14

generic

No known examples

27.6

1940

??

??

??

 

Edward Mills Antique Tractors 1930-1960 Antique Cars 1960-1985

On 6/25/2019 7:33 PM, 'Rich Barber' c300@xxxxxxx [Chrysler300] wrote:

??

From:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>On Behalf Of Curtis Roys curtisaroys@xxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]
Sent: Tuesday, June 25, 2019 1:44 PM
To: Don Warnaar <300country@xxxxxxx>
Cc: Noel Hastalis <cpaviper@xxxxxxxxxxx>; Chrysler300ClubInternational <Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] American Classic radial tires

Well, that's an easy decision, my 65 300L is original from front to back & I was hoping to keep the wheels & hubcaps!!!

Amazingly after sitting for 25 years in a garage, it still has original bias ply tires. 

This club is AWESOME,??

Thanks,

Curtis

Curtis Roys, LLC

432-967-2582



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