I think you meant "bias look radials"? They are not bias ply tires, they're radial ply tires. A tire can't be built both ways.
Yea...no such tire..! Radials would not...be "radial" in design with a "bias" cord lay..! A bias cord lay would not work as a radial tire, it would work as a...bias ply tire. You can't have it both ways in one tire. Read the details a little slower. Mike
You are both correct. They are bias ply LOOKING radials. Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
I have those on my 56 and love the look. I was planning on just running bias ply tires but came across a good deal on the wheels and tires used and they were only about a year old. However, we struggled getting them balanced and actually ended up with balancing beads instead of weights. Not sure if it was the wheels or tires. Otherwise, I like them so far.
I would look into Diamond Back Auburn radials. These are all new tires built on new molds, with two different styles; Deluxe (pie crust) and Premium (vintage). All are tubeless radials.
If it was the wheels, they would have a 'notable' m*** of excess material in one spot! Unbalance of a sphere is noticeable when the unbalance is out toward the cir***ference. Ergo, 'Tire Balancing' is what the service is, not 'Wheel Balancing'. (although the corrective weights are applied to the 'wheel') But the tires are what's 'out of balance'.
I love them!! Ride is awesome, Had real bias ply on before, no comparison(IMHO)6.70-15 front and 8.20-15 back! Pete
Hi. I have the Coker on both my 46 chevy coupe and my 50 Plymouth Deluxe. Tire shop had no problems balancing them and they really improve the steering compared to bias. I have close 8,000 miles on the Chevy and are showing very minimal wear. Only hade them on the Plymouth for about 800 miles at this time as I have not been driving the Plymouth much lately for other reasons but should get it back on the road next month as I am ordering new instrument gauges today. Jimmie
Been running them on my roadster for a few years now. Not overly impressed with how they are compared to the Bias set I always ran. Was hoping for a big improvement but that was not the case. Considering the cost there going to be on the roadster until they wear out.
The "con" would be the $277 price. But maybe I'm financially naïve, as I run used tires on all my cars.
I've had them on the truck for almost two years now. Smoother ride than the Coker bias I had before and I like the look, too.
89F72614-98C4-4AD8-8116-B1691000F1D6 by KFC posted Oct 3, 2018 at 3:33 PM I’ve had them on my 41 for a couple of years, handle and ride well, balanced fine. They have made the steering heavier but it’s a trade of against actual wet weather grip so no contest. They don’t tram line and the car will cruise at 80 all day comfortably