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  #1  
Old 26-02-18, 15:25
Ilian Filipov Ilian Filipov is offline
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Hi all,
I want to replace the wheels of my CMP scale models with something more decent and it looks the only right way would be to print them in 3D. Can somebody tell me the outer diameter of 10.50-16 tyre? For 9.00-16 it was found: 905 mm.; but I can't find anything on the bigger size.
Thanks in advance!
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  #2  
Old 26-02-18, 21:35
David Herbert David Herbert is offline
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These are 100% profile tyres so they SHOULD have an outside diameter when mounted of 10.5 + 10.5 + 16 = 37" or x 25.4 = 940mm

David
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Old 27-02-18, 05:16
Andrew H. Andrew H. is offline
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Doesn't 10.5" refer to their width? If so, it would not indicate height.
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  #4  
Old 27-02-18, 05:39
Andrew H. Andrew H. is offline
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The modern equivalent of the original 10.5 X 16 tyres as used in WW2 is 262/75/R16 (10.5' X 25mm = 262mm). In other words, the tyre is 262mm wide and the chord is 75% of that = 196mm deep. Also the rim at 16" X 25mm = 400mm. Therefore the diameter must be 196mm + 196mm + 400mm = 792mm or 31.68 inches.

Thats the arithmetic, but we found that modern 262/75/R16 tyres looked too small on our LRDG truck (based on WW2 photos) and we had to go another size up before we got a tyre diameter that "looked right".
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Old 27-02-18, 06:36
Lang Lang is offline
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Andrew

The reason they did not fit was all the old tyres were basically 100 height ie height of the tyre is the same as the width. They had various specialist odd-ball heights but you would expect any normal tyre of the period to be equal height/width.

This construction was so standard across the auto industry that tyres used to be measured by height with no wheel size ie 30x3. Everybody knew that the tyre was the same height as width so they knew that the 3 inch wide tire would go on a 24 inch rim (height of tyre top and bottom subtracted from overall height.

When they started with radial they messed with profiles so your 265/75 is only 3/4 as high as it is wide. To match the !0.50 you would need a 265/100 which I doubt is made.

As you found out we are now forced to use over wide tyres to get the original height if we want something off the shelf or go to the few specialists around the world still building 100 profile bias construction tyres.

Lang

Last edited by Lang; 27-02-18 at 06:41.
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  #6  
Old 27-02-18, 11:06
Grant Bowker Grant Bowker is offline
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The AEDB design record gives outside diameters for 10.50-16 tires that vary by brand:
Pneumatic cross-country 37.4-38.2 inches (2% variation)
Pneumatic highway tread 37.0-37.6 inches
Run-flat cross-country 37.6 inches
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  #7  
Old 27-02-18, 21:45
Andrew H. Andrew H. is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lang View Post
Andrew

The reason they did not fit was all the old tyres were basically 100 height ie height of the tyre is the same as the width. They had various specialist odd-ball heights but you would expect any normal tyre of the period to be equal height/width.

This construction was so standard across the auto industry that tyres used to be measured by height with no wheel size ie 30x3. Everybody knew that the tyre was the same height as width so they knew that the 3 inch wide tire would go on a 24 inch rim (height of tyre top and bottom subtracted from overall height.

When they started with radial they messed with profiles so your 265/75 is only 3/4 as high as it is wide. To match the !0.50 you would need a 265/100 which I doubt is made.

As you found out we are now forced to use over wide tyres to get the original height if we want something off the shelf or go to the few specialists around the world still building 100 profile bias construction tyres.

Lang
Thanks Lang!
Thats good information I didn't know.
We are still working on a plan to get your tyres across the ditch (a friend has a large yacht)
Andrew
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  #8  
Old 27-02-18, 22:16
Lauren Child Lauren Child is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lang View Post
Andrew

The reason they did not fit was all the old tyres were basically 100 height ie height of the tyre is the same as the width. They had various specialist odd-ball heights but you would expect any normal tyre of the period to be equal height/width.

This construction was so standard across the auto industry that tyres used to be measured by height with no wheel size ie 30x3. Everybody knew that the tyre was the same height as width so they knew that the 3 inch wide tire would go on a 24 inch rim (height of tyre top and bottom subtracted from overall height.

When they started with radial they messed with profiles so your 265/75 is only 3/4 as high as it is wide. To match the !0.50 you would need a 265/100 which I doubt is made.

As you found out we are now forced to use over wide tyres to get the original height if we want something off the shelf or go to the few specialists around the world still building 100 profile bias construction tyres.

Lang

I hit this problem with 1050R20 being 75% hieght versus 1050-20. I'd assume the same is true for other sizes, with the "R" being shorthand for a lower profile.
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  #9  
Old 27-02-18, 22:45
Ilian Filipov Ilian Filipov is offline
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Thanks for your answers guys, you're really awesome!
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