gigabelly
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Do you have a lift on the pic in your avatar? Are those the hummer tires ?
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There are several tire size calculators on the internet to help compare sizes, I prefer this one here.I hate to ask a remedial question, but can you put the tire dementions in the metric so I can compare them apples to apples? What I plan to have mounted on Monday are 265 75r 16.
The standard sizes follow the same convention as the metric sizes: 37x12.5x16 = 37" diameter, 12.5" tread width, and a 16" wheel size.Now, I don't have too firm of a grasp on what each number represents, but I understand that the 265 is the height, 75 is the tread width, and 16, I think, is the rim size. What doesnt translate for me is the 37x12x16 and the like. I guess that is just in standard units instead of metric. Do I just convert? Maybe I just answered my own question. Duh.
What size did you end up putting on?Just put on the new Goodyear wrangler duraTrac MT. What a GiFrigginNormous difference. Rides smooth now. Stops without the death rattle now. No more getting stuck in wet grass now. My last tires were terrible, apparently. Pretty dang happy about it. I tried to express my joy to my wife, to which she said something along the lines of....that's nice dear.... So, I express my joy here, amongst the brethren. Whippeee! Ok, I'm better now.
Check the date codes on the Hummer tires - some are reporting that the tires are quite old & have had cracking issues...For the price the Hummer radials are hard to beat. I gave $75/pc for like new tires, $50/set of 4 GM factory 16.5 wheels and have been very pleased with the setup.
As long as you remember that the 'cheap' 8-bolt rims are for bias-ply tires ONLY... the 8-bolt rims do not have the proper bead angle for radial tires and are not designed to support the loads to the rim that radial sidewalls transmit.trail worthy is 244 for a custom bead lock rim with rock ring and tire cheaper than Mtr
My main issue is with people using a mentality of 'the radial will mount onto the 8-bolt rim, so it must be okay to do it' - wrong mentality, Period.Tanner,this is true.Some surplus humvee tires have deteriorated sidewalls that are not safe to use.If you buy them sight unseen,deal with a reputable dealer.The first set of 4 I bought I picked them myself.When I got home and cleaned them,I discovered 1 was badly cracked @ the sidewall, and useless!The next set I purchased online were in almost new condition!They were a great buy and a great all around tire.Buyer beware!
um not so sure about that.As long as you remember that the 'cheap' 8-bolt rims are for bias-ply tires ONLY... the 8-bolt rims do not have the proper bead angle for radial tires and are not designed to support the loads to the rim that radial sidewalls transmit.
The 8-bolt HMMWV rims are sold cheap because they can develop cracks in the lockring (and many have) due to weight loading. And cheap on the market because of being designed for bias tires -
AMG redesigned the rims to a stronger 12-bolt pattern when the change to radials occurred on HMMWV's. And eventually went to 24-bolt rims for the up-armored HMMWV's -
Additional info: 8 bolt rims: Do not go over 30 PSI EVER. The 8 bolts are for the lightweights HMMWV (old ones). Besides the pressure limit: If you air up an 8 bolt on the hub, and the bolts do let go, it will smack you. The wheel is held on by the inboard half. The 12 bolts are much safer: the outboard half is bolted on the hub, if the bolts were to let go, the wheels goes towards the truck. The 8 bolt rims are rated to 30 psi max and the 12 bolts are 50 psi, IIRC
'Tanner'
dont go by written tire size they almost all lie .ive seen 37s only 34" tall .its best to measure the tires if you can.
Appreciate your input - I'll stand behind what the tire and rim designers and manufacturers say... Bias tire beads require a different rim angle.As the owner of TrailWorthyFab and having sold well over 10,000 hummer wheels and tires in the past few years i am going to rain on some of what has been said about the hummer wheels.
8 bolt Vs 12 bolt wheels and running radial tires does not effect one thing. The only reason they went to an 8 bolt wheel from a 12 bolt wheel was the fact that the Humvee's almost double in weight, by adding deck guns, full armor. The orig. 8 bolt wheel came stock with a mag runflat and a 36" bias ply tire. The reason the 8 bolt wheel catches slack is the fact that there haven't been any new 36" bias ply tires made for the hummers in years. So.... Unless that tire has been kept inside there is a great chance of getting tires with cracks in them, due to age. While there is a wheel design change between the 8 and 12 bolt. When a wheel is recentered at that point they are almost the same by design.
Example: If you cut the wheel mounting surface WMS out of a STOCK 12 bolt wheel which is on what we call the outer or the dish. You then weld the new center into the back half of the wheel or what we call the shell. At that point your WMS is on the back half of the wheel and the outer is nothing more than a ring that you can weld in a rock ring to. (Stock 12 bolt wheels had rubber runflats and Radial 37" Goodyear MT's)
On an 8 bolt wheel the WMS is on the back half of the wheel or the "shell". That center is cut out and the new center is welded into the back half of the wheel (same as you do on a 12 bolt). There is then the stock outer ring, where a rock ring can be welded in. (8 bolt wheels had 36" Goodyear BIAS ply tires and Mag runflats)
Now.... There are 24 bolt wheels. I do not stock these as IMHO there is no need for 24 bolts on a wheel. It is setting yourself up to have to mess up more bolt and they take longer to put together. (24 bolts have BFG Baha TA's and rubber runflats)
We can talk about engineered products, however. When a wheel is recentered and the aftermarket center is thicker than the stock center that is cut out the wheel rateing goes out the window. Our recentered wheels are stronger than stock wheels.
I would be more than happy to answer any other questions that anyone might have. I like the chance to keep people in the loop, from someone that deals with this stuff every day.
Appreciate your input - I'll stand behind what the tire and rim designers and manufacturers say... Bias tire beads require a different rim angle.
'Tanner'
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