Hybrid View
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06-06-2007 06:42 AM #1
Wheel/Slick conversion to street question
Guys,
Sorry for what you all would probably consider basic questions, but I'm moving out of my comfort zone turning a drag car into a pro-street cruiser and need your advice. I've acquired a car that currently has 9.5" rear wheels (Drag Lites) with M/T slicks that measure about 27.5" in diameter by 9.5" wide. I would like to convert over to a street-legal tire but wanted your recommendations.
1.) Is there a particular street tire that you would recommend that has similar height/width/sidewall characteristics?
2.) I noticed that the slicks are screwed through the rims. Can you still run street tires on these rims since there are now holes from the screws, or am I looking at purchasing rims as well? If tubes are an option for street tires, I guess that is a question as well.Don't ride/drive faster than your Guardian Angel can fly...
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06-06-2007 07:15 AM #2
Take a look at the Mickey Thompson wide rear tires as well as Hoover Tires.
Summit carries both and they have an on-line site.
Even with tread, the wide tires will slip around a bit in the wet, but it's not bad.
You shouldn't have any problems with air leakage due to holes in the side of the rims.
The air seal on a tubeless tire is on the bead.
Since you've got screws in the rim now and the car is going to have a drag racing theme, put the screws back in with the street tires.C9
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06-06-2007 07:17 AM #3
Thanks C9 - I was hoping for that answer on the screws!Don't ride/drive faster than your Guardian Angel can fly...
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06-06-2007 12:14 PM #4
On my Mirada I have BF Goodrich 295/15/50, and they were about 11 inches wide, but do not know about the diameter.
JackK.I.S.S.
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06-06-2007 12:57 PM #5
The Hoosier street radials are hard to beat on the street. Don't get the drag radials as they are too soft. They have a much more open tread and work much better when it is wet. Still any really big wide tire like this can be a handfull when it is wet. Just be carefull.
I don't know about the screws. The street radials may or may not seal. They only run about 20-25 psi maybe if everything is clean and free of burrs they will seal. I'd hate to try fix-a-flat but it's a possibility. You are not really supposed to run tubes in these but I would try it as a last resort.
My Hoosiers don't leak on 14" Convo Pros but I don't have screws either. As it turns out the Goodrich TA leak a bit on the front however. Not much but they take topping off every couple weeks.
good luck41 Willys 350 sbc 6-71 blower t350, 9in, 4 link
99 Dodge ram 3500 dually 5 sp 4.10
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06-06-2007 03:38 PM #6
BF goodrich drag radials i never leave home with out them have used them all i have had the best luck with the bf s you could rescrew them they may leak abit should not be that bad put a dab of sealer on the screws before you run them in you do not need tubes
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06-07-2007 05:06 AM #7
Thanks everyone...Don't ride/drive faster than your Guardian Angel can fly...
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06-07-2007 11:09 PM #8
if you have to run the screws in. just use some bead sealer on the screws
I believe this was somewhere around 2015, Rick, Rosie and Johnboy
John Norton aka johnboy