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Single-piece Rim Wheels

What should I do when working with single-piece rim wheels?
What should I avoid doing?


What should I do when working with single-piece rim wheels?

  • Stand to one side when checking or inflating truck or automobile tires.
  • Keep your face above the fender or to one side when inflating tires.
  • Remove the valve core to deflate tire completely before removing the tire from the rim.
  • Mount and remove from the narrow ledge side of the wheel. Avoid damaging the tire beads.
  • Mount only rims and tires of compatible diameter and width.
  • Apply a nonflammable rubber lubricant to the bead and wheel mating surfaces before assembling the rim wheel, unless the tire or wheel manufacturer recommends otherwise.
  • Use a tire changing machine with the tire inflated only to the minimum pressure necessary to force the tire bead onto the rim ledge. Create an airtight seal before removing from the tire changing machine.
  • Remove the bead expander before installing the valve core and as soon as the rim wheel becomes airtight (when the tire bead slips onto the bead seat).
  • Remove the bead expander before inflating the tire to more than 35 kPa (5 psi).
  • Inflate when the tire is contained within a restraining device, positioned behind a barrier, or bolted on the vehicle with the lug nuts fully tightened.
  • Inspect the rim flanges, bead seating surfaces, and tire for defects and foreign particles.
  • Clean the contaminated surfaces and do not use any hazardous, defective parts.
  • Remove the hold-down cone before inflating unless otherwise directed by the manufacturer. In most cases it is wrong to assume that the hold-down cone prevents or minimizes an accident. It could become an additional flying object.
  • Seat the beads with short bursts of air, not a continuous flow. Allow time for each shot of air to move the beads toward their seat.
  • Deflate the assembly, reposition the tire on the rim, re-lubricate, and then re-inflate the tire if the beads have not seated by the time the pressure reaches 275 kPa (40 psi).

What should I avoid doing?

  • Do not position your head and shoulders over the tire during inflation. Use a clip-on chuck, sufficient hose length, and an in-line valve with gauge to stand out of the path.
  • Do not inflate tire when any flat, solid surface is in the path and within 30 cm (one foot) of the sidewall.
  • Do not exceed the recommended inflation pressure.
  • Do not rework, weld, braze, or otherwise heat wheels.
  • Do not apply lubricant to a tire bead while it is under pressure. Sudden freeing of the bead may cause it to slam into the flange with sufficient force to break the bead wires.
  • Do not attempt to repair tires larger than your equipment can handle.
Document last updated on February 23, 2000

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