So, for my Fuchs centered BBS race wheels, 7.5x16, I finally have the need to put
on the Hoosier A7. (My tires last a long time since I don't do too many events per
year).
A while back, I got sick of tire places that charge $75 or more to mount up the stuff
that they don't sell. I told them if they would sell Hoosier I would buy it there.
So when I had the A6, I just took apart the wheels and assembled on the tires. Don't
need good balancing for low speeds at autocross so I can do that on a bubble.
The A7 in the same 205/45/16 size looks identical in dimensions, but the damn things
will not seat the last part of one of the beads. I'm not going above 40psi. I used a
rubber mallet for a while, I put one on the car to shake it, then I went up and down
the driveway a few times, then a few hundred yards down the street slowing going
side to side. No dice.
Now I have 2 like this and the other 2 I haven't tried at all. Any special way to make
this work or do I have to crawl back to the bastards with the machinery?
Thanks
Harbor Freight sells a manual tire changing stand for $45. Don't know how well it works though.
http://www.harborfreight.com/automotive-motorcycle/tire-wheel/manual-tire-changer-62317.html
Bead won't give in (holds air fine though)
Silly question perhaps, but I assume you've lubed up the beads well with soap? (or some like hair spray if you have any issues with tires rotating on the rims while driving)
yep soap and water...and why not go over fourty psi to set the bead? might only take 42 psi to pop hahaha pun intended ..dont be scared
MikeC
always use lube...
Strangely, on the A6 I did not use any lube at all, with no problems.
Now, I made the mistake of reading a bunch of crap on the internet, so apparently
some soaps have a sodium hydroxide which is not good to leave in contact with
aluminum. So I went with K-Y. Seems slippery, but once part of the bead gets into
the right place, the last part has a bigger hump to get over. It's maybe only 1/8"
bigger diameter but won't budge.
The tires say right on the sidewall not to exceed 40psi when seating. Also, BBS of
course is a spun aluminum rim piece which I'm sure is not as strong as a 1-piece.
I don't want to damage anything.
Maybe I'll find a good soap and use tons of soap and water.
10 4 on the over 40 i had no idea you learn something new evryday
Had time to try one tonight. I cleaned and polished to the degree possible,
then used a bunch of palmolive, and it popped on at 30psi.
All 4 are on. I think I figured out the basic problem. I'm using 6" inner
and 1.5" outer. The inner always popped right in, there is only a small hump and
it stays aligned during assembly. But the 1.5" outer doesn't have anything after
the hump, it takes a 90 degree turn there. So about 1/2 of it seats during assembly
and then the other half has a big hill to climb. I needed to clean that part with
scotchbrite really well, then smear on the dishwashing liquid to that piece and to the
bottom of the tire bead. Then by the time you get to about 30 - 35 psi it slips past.
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