Yes, you are correct!
True "Split Rims" are different & are MUCH MORE DANGEROUS!
Many tire shops won't even touch these anymore, so probably best to use the correct terminology if you are calling around to find a tire shop to mount a tire on your "multi piece rim"!! Otherwise you might get a lot of "We don't do those" responses.
THANKS for the correction!!
Split rims scared the bejeepers outta me even back when I still thought I was immortal.
I never had a lock ring blow off. However I did refuse to re-inflate a few after I fixed them because the lock ring or rim was in bad shape. I'd put them back on the truck, give the driver the air hose, and back off a hundred yards.
Funny thing was the only time I got hurt was a tubeless tire (single piece rim - no lock ring). I never was scared of these but I should have been. None of us put them in the cage to air them up. Tubeless semi tires were rare back then so we learned the hard way.
Guy came in with a brand new low boy trailer. Had tubeless tires and one was not only flat, one bead was all the way off the rim.
I assumed (the word that kills) that he had run it flat for so long that it partially dismounted itself....bad decision.
I popped it back on the rim and partially inflated with it laying on the floor. Checked for leaks - no leaks. This was a 12 ply bias tire so max inflation pressure was 85 or 90 PSI. I was using a chuck that did not lock so I was squatting next to the tire holding the chuck on the stem.
I kept adding more pressure so I could find the leak (another bad call). Last time I checked it had 65 PSI. Soon after that I felt the tire suddenly getting "taller". I dropped the chuck an leaned back just as the bottom bead slipped off the rim. All I remembered was a really loud noise.
Spectators said it picked me up and blew me backwards about six feet. I crashed into the Coates car tire machine and was out cold.
The tire and rim went straight up, hit the ceiling and bounced around the shop a couple of times. By the grace of God it did not hit me on the way up. It would have splattered me on the ceiling like a fly hit by a swatter.
Besides bruises, a week of ringing ears, the only thing that required treatment was one eye - the drit and crud blown off the floor scratched my cornea. Had to wear an eye patch for a while.
They took me to the hospital to get checked. The driver grabbed his tire/rim and beat feet with that spot "singled out" - Budd wheel). I suspect either the rim or tire was defective but I'll never know.
I used the cage for tubeless semi tires from then on.
Regards and glad to still be here,
Jim