Easy lifehacks

What kind of wheels are Dayton Wire wheels?

What kind of wheels are Dayton Wire wheels?

Dayton Wire Wheels™ The undisputed quality leader in car wire rims. Manufactured in the U.S.A. since 1916 , our wheels combine precision engineering and premium construction that allow us to offer the industry’s only maintenance free wire wheels never need truing.

What kind of tires do Dayton hubs use?

The truck would look period-correct with 20″ rims and tube-type tires, but 22.5 tubeless are way more common now and they ride much better. Way easier to repair also. BMT Certified Know-It-All!

How to lessen the gap on a Dayton wheel?

I’ve seen two ways to lessen the “unsightly” gap 22.5 rims leave on a Dayton style wheel. One was a ring that snapped over the gap and really looked quite nice. The one I seen on a truck was polished stainless and really carried the appeal and the other was the inner space of this gap powder coated a contrasting color.

Where did the Dayton hubs get the truck from?

The truck was an IH “Westcoaster” long nose. Really went together nicely but caught my eye because of the Dayton hubs. The truck was originally from Oregon IIRC. Plodding along with no job nor practical application for my existence, but still trying to fix what’s broke. BMT Certified Know-It-All!

Dayton Wire Wheels, the finest knock-off style wire wheels that money can buy. Dayton Wire Wheels are made in the USA. Serving the wire wheel enthusiast since 1916.

The truck would look period-correct with 20″ rims and tube-type tires, but 22.5 tubeless are way more common now and they ride much better. Way easier to repair also. BMT Certified Know-It-All!

I’ve seen two ways to lessen the “unsightly” gap 22.5 rims leave on a Dayton style wheel. One was a ring that snapped over the gap and really looked quite nice. The one I seen on a truck was polished stainless and really carried the appeal and the other was the inner space of this gap powder coated a contrasting color.

The truck was an IH “Westcoaster” long nose. Really went together nicely but caught my eye because of the Dayton hubs. The truck was originally from Oregon IIRC. Plodding along with no job nor practical application for my existence, but still trying to fix what’s broke. BMT Certified Know-It-All!

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Ruth Doyle