I might be so far out in left field that I ain`t even in the ball park,but maybe a Chrysler. Good luck.Have fun.Be safe. Leo
If not Mopar........then Buick......bolt surface looks Buick, but wheel cover/hub cap holes have a Mopar look.
I wonder how much it will cost you to properly dispose of? Just might be a reason why you found it on the side of the road.
I'll cut the tire up with a sawzall and put it in the trash, the wheel will be added to my collection of orphaned steel wheels.
Should be 5 on 5" bolt pattern Buick as was already stated. Mopars had a similar locating pin hole arrangement but they would be 4.5" pattern and the clip holes on this wheel are Buick. Stuff like this seems worthless until you need one to complete a set and the hubcaps you want to use will only go on this special wheel. Good on you for saving it.
5 on 5 with a 3 1/16 hub hole would make it a Buick, Pont or Olds and it should be 5 1/2 width. I have been looking for one now for two months! LOL
edit: the below comment was made after misreading the above post. I missed the implication to bolt pattern and thought it was in reference to wheel width. Sorry. Buick wheel bolt patterns were 5 x 5", from at least 1936 through 1996, on full size cars. Intermediate and some compacts with 5 bolt pattern were typically 5 on 4.75" .......or 6" or 6 1/2"....and it IS a Buick wheel, as others have stated.....but some seem to think it might be Pontiac or Olds.....it isn't, though they share the 5 on 5" bolt pattern and a few other similarities, but are not the same as Buick. Ray '
5 on 5 with the large hub bore and those hubcap clip holes make it a Studebaker Commander or Light Truck wheel. Buick never used those style hubcap clips, as I recall, and the Olds/Poncho wheels have the smaller hub bore.
Sorry Rainier, I have to respectfully disagree with your assessment. I currently own, and have owned, several older Buicks and have probably 25 or 30 of these wheels on hand, at present. The slots and small holes circling the lug holes are where the clips would be riveted on for wheels destined for a car with poverty caps. Wheels for cars with full wheel covers got the 'non-clipped' version, as shown in the OP's photo. Studebaker wheels that I have seen, and I have some of them here too, have a center stamping more like a '40/'48 Ford wheel, but with three slots out board of the recessed area and spring steel clips insert into those slots, the hub caps snap over them. While most Studebakers have 5 x 4.5" wheel bolt pattern, there are some older senior models that used a 5 x 5" bolt pattern. I can provide photos to back up what I am saying here, but I am at home as I reply. The samples I speak of are at my shop. Ray
It is a Buick wheel, 5" bolt pattern. Buick never had a 5 1/2 bolt pattern. There are no clips for the small hubcap as this car came with wheel covers. The small holes are for the guide pin as these cars used lug bolts not studs and lug nuts.
Here's a picture to back you guys up....It's a Buick for sure just what you guys said with clips small cap no clips full covers also the wagons had 6 1/2" wide wheels Sent from my QTAQZ3 using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
@Hnstray I know when to bow-out, and on a second look I completely agree with you. I overlooked the little windows where the center mounts to the hoop. Or rather, the ones that aren't there. I've got a bunch of Studebaker wheels, and they seemed to use both the riveted-in and the clip-in hubcap clips depending on year. All Studebaker light trucks used the 5 on 5 bolt pattern (with the same large center bore as Buick) unless ordered with 6-Lug axles. My '59 Scotsman Pickup's stock wheels are 5 on 5's with clip-in hubcap clips. Oddly enough, the truck actually ran with chromed Buick 15x6 wheels back in the 60s (I'd love to find another set). Early Commander trim and up passenger cars used the 5 on 5 wheels at least through 46, if not later. Like you, I'm not at home and am going off memory...
I was thinking it was an early Riviera wheel that used the cast aluminum wheel cover that bolted on from the inside, looks like it's a few years earlier than that. I dismounted the tire from the rim, the inside looks good, still shiny black paint.