Antichrist
Expedition Leader
Looking at the photo again, it's pretty obvious why it bent, the white lettering is on the inside.
people will crawl past something and the tire side wall will flex and then the rim hits the obstruction and is ruined. There is a lot of torque available at the rim when a truck is crawling.
Well, when I'm done with these alloys, maybe I'll do some interesting experiments. If this is true, it would seem to indicate the wheels are stunningly weak compared to the load they are carrying.
Have yet to see or even hear of one single damaged rim, but then just about everybody I'm out with has big tires.You dont need experiments to figure that out, just watch them in action and see a few damaged and it becomes very clear.
You may not believe it, but I have seen it happen.
...The pressure in the tire actually is what supports the weight of the truck. when you contact the rim in a single location the force that would otherwise have been distributed around the rim gets focused in a single location and the rim yeilds...
looking at the photo again, it's pretty obvious why it bent, the white lettering is on the inside.
lots of rocks in in the PNW, usually wet. slipping off the rocks is just kind of a given. maybe being aired down more is just doing a much better job of protecting the rim lip?
For me, Steel rims are the way to go for 2 reasons.
1. You can remove the axle shaft without removing the wheel.
2. Being more "dished in" they do not get as much paint damage from rocks.
View attachment 38036
A fair number of people run them. I haven't seen anyone complain about them from a technical perspective.So would the spare on a D1 be considered a good steel wheel? If so I may just get 4 more of them, paint them black and call it a day.