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curb impact! what to check? (which is now about my steel rally restore)

Yours looks like a 15x8. 15x10 on that size tire would be almost a flat sidewall with no over bulge over the rim. I too loved the rally wheel look. I'm looking for more for my Tahoe right now but having no luck.
 
so i've been running on my spare and just picked up a screw. I want to plug it but it's pretty close to the side wall... thoughts?

20160221_114550.jpg

20160221_114545.jpgi'm trying to get as many miles as I can out of the spare, until I get my tax return. I'm cleaning up a set of rallys and i'm planning on 4 new bfg's, but I need a month or so out of this guy, and a plug would be a nice stop gap. local used tire guy wants 60 for a used and abused firestone, not having it
 
That is no problem,its far enough away from the shoulder--I have plugs in 2 tires that are actually on the verge of the sidewall more so than the tread,and have had no issues...
I would go thru the extra time and expense to have the tire taken off and inspected on the inside though,in case the screw scarred up the lining or sidewall...then use a "patch/plug" combo to repair it if all looks good inside...patch/plugs also work on sidewall holes too..


Here ,garages and tires shops by law,are not supposed to just shove in a plug and send you on your way,like they did for decades--some people got hurt or died after a plugged tire blew apart shortly after being plugged and laws were changed....(but I've done it a few dozen times myself without an incident)..
 
As long as it's not in the actual sidewall you will Be ok. I ran 6 months on one before I had the money to replace all the tires. Sidewall has half as many layers so it's easier to have a full blowout if the belts are damaged. But a small screw probably won't be enough to do that.
 
so i've been running on my spare and just picked up a screw. I want to plug it but it's pretty close to the side wall... thoughts?

View attachment 199213

View attachment 199214i'm trying to get as many miles as I can out of the spare, until I get my tax return. I'm cleaning up a set of rallys and i'm planning on 4 new bfg's, but I need a month or so out of this guy, and a plug would be a nice stop gap. local used tire guy wants 60 for a used and abused firestone, not having it

I don't see a problem with patching that, but the tire is about shot, tread-wise. Not worth sinking dollars into that one. :dunno:

Should be able to get your tax return now, right? Or at least quite soon? :dunno:
 
I don't see a problem with patching that, but the tire is about shot, tread-wise. Not worth sinking dollars into that one. :dunno:

Should be able to get your tax return now, right? Or at least quite soon? :dunno:
yeah, I still haven't filed yet, and now i'm paying for the procrastination. the tires about done, so I figured a plug is easy enough to do, if it'll work
 
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it's already plugged...if it ain't leaking just roll with it.
 
okay, i'be pretty much worn out the old rubber, which means I need to make a play. I have a welder that'll do the full treatment on my cracked rim ...for $225 (ouch), orrrrr, I clean up these steel rallys:

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20160323_171544.jpg

20160323_171549.jpgaside from steel wool and elbow grease, anyone have any product recommendations? will the wheels need new coating if I scour them?
 
I'd much rather clean up the steel than drop that kinda money into repairing a single rim. :eek1:
I'm with you there. I'm trying to look at it like this, I'd be spending 225 to salvage the set. But brillo and spray paint are mighty cheap, and I have more important things to waste money on these days. I really want to get the metal nice and clean before painting. I've heard of all sorts of sprays and chemicals and such - is any of it worth it, or am I best off just attacking it like mad with the steel wool?
 
I'm with you there. I'm trying to look at it like this, I'd be spending 225 to salvage the set. But brillo and spray paint are mighty cheap, and I have more important things to waste money on these days. I really want to get the metal nice and clean before painting. I've heard of all sorts of sprays and chemicals and such - is any of it worth it, or am I best off just attacking it like mad with the steel wool?


take some 220 grit sandpaper to the scratched areas to feather them.. than steel wool the whole thing to dull it up to accept paint...
 
that picture sells it. Sunday's sand, scuff and paint day. off topic, but what size tires and how much lift, looks great

Thank you! 4" lift, 35 inch BFG's. Haven't got them to rub yet.
 
I like Rally's,I have them on my van,my Burb,and had them on the other 1/2 tons I had too...probably have a dozen of them...most I found in scrap piles at garages or the town landfill's metal pile--perfectly good too...some had decent tires still on them too..

I dont really care for mag or aluminum rims--too fragile in my opinion..one bumped curb and they crack--had issues with the lugs loosening up on some "uni-lug" ones too,that nearly got me killed..they look good,might help handling by reducing unsprung weight ,but I would rather have steel rims..
 
Thank you! 4" lift, 35 inch BFG's. Haven't got them to rub yet.
I need to check out your build thread. how does it do at highway speeds? I always hedge on lifting and big tired, cause mines a daily driver. it drives and handles so great now, I don't want to mess with it
 
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