I had a similar experience. In 1979, I bought a 56 Olds in
Los Angeles and drove it home. It came with fairly fresh Sears WWW bias-belted tires
that were only a couple of years old. I just sold it last summer with the same
tires on it. The tread was worn down to the replacement point, but I never had
any trouble with them. They wore evenly and stayed round. They rode smooth at
70+ mph. The only one I replaced was because a king pin was worn and the tire’s
inner edge wore down. I checked every year for signs of age and cracks when I
cleaned the white walls, but they looked perfect and never leaked. This car was
always garaged. These tires lasted 30+ years.
My 56
Dodge got new Remington bias-belted WWW tires when I got it in 1983. These
tires are now 25 years old and this car is always garaged. I check every year
for signs of age and cracks when I clean the white walls, but they look perfect
and never leak. This year I had to replace one with the matching new spare
because it finally developed a minor ply separation, causing a small bump. I
think I will look for some radial WWW tires this time. But I want tires with
stiff sidewalls so I don’t get mushy handling.
Dave
Homstad
56 Dodge
D500
-----Original
Message-----
From: Forward Look Mopar
Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Fury Jim
Sent: Sunday, May 11, 2008 10:08
PM
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [FWDLK] tire'age
i had a
49 Kaiser with 29xxx orig miles, and a set of tires bought at sears in 1956
[had the receipt] which were Denman 9.00 x 15s huge skins with a
peculiar tread design, just 9 solid rows, no breaks, anyway it was stored in 56
with its new tires with enough bricks to keep only a footprint of the tire in
touch with the ground as they lost air over the years.... we pulled her out of
the garage in '96 after airing the tires up...
they
had flat spots from having contacted the garage floor for about 40-41 years,
and they'd synchronize once in a while and made for a little rough riding.....
so..... 1 at a time, after chocking 3 wheels, i jacked up the driven wheel till
the flat spot just touched the ground, let the clutch out in 2nd, and a little
at a time dropped the car about 1/16 to 1/8' at a time, about 15 min per wheel
[and a little dip in the driveway] all 4 tires were "lathed" down to
roundness..... i drove on the tires for about 10 yrs which included a motor
swap from the flat 6 to a buick 3.8 :) and traded the car a good 4-5 years
ago.... last summer i saw it in CT [2.5 hrs from me] with the same tires, and
even a youtube video of it flamethrowing and burning out on the '56 or older
denmans...
i just
put a pair of cordovan 3-stripe tires on chrome reverse rims on the rear of my
41 plymouth with a 500" motor in it... we'll see how they do.... NOS from
'66
all in
all it seems that all the tire nightmares apply to 80's and newer tires.... i
ran a set of 4 silvertowns [7.50 x 14] on my 59 fury- daily driving for about
10,000 miles... the fronts were still good but the rears were down to the cords
from too many smoke shows.... i dont know what they were rated to but they
stayed together up to about 125-130mph [which i think was about 5500 points-bouncing
rpm for the speedo games with a 3.23 suregrip]
the
alpha-numeric coker classics are a pretty god tire too... they look right, and
at 25psi out back can handle about a 1/2 throttle launch in my 440'd plymouth
have
fun, its getting warmer every day!
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