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  2. Wheel sizing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel_sizing

    Wheels with Asanti 28 in (710 mm) rims on a police Hummer H2 car. The wheel size is the size designation of a wheel given by its diameter, width, and offset. The diameter of the wheel is the diameter of the cylindrical surface on which the tire bead rides. The width is the inside distance between the bead seat faces.

  3. ISO 5775 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_5775

    ISO 5775 is an international standard for labeling the size of bicycle tires and rims. The system used was originally developed by the European Tyre and Rim Technical Organisation (ETRTO). It is designed to make tire sizing consistent and clear. It replaces overlapping informal systems that ambiguously distinguished between sizes.

  4. Alloy wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloy_wheel

    Alloy wheels are also purchased for cosmetic purposes although the cheaper alloys used are usually not corrosion-resistant. Alloys allow the use of attractive bare-metal finishes, but these need to be sealed with paint or wheel covers. Even if so protected the wheels in use will eventually start to corrode after 3 to 5 years but refurbishment ...

  5. Tire code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tire_code

    There is the rare exception of metric-diameter tires, such as the use of the 390 size, which in this case would indicate a rim of 390 mm in diameter. Few tires are made to this size currently. The number may be longer where a half-inch size is used, for example many heavy transport trucks now use 22.5-inch tires. [7] [8]

  6. Plus sizing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plus_sizing

    Plus sizing is the practice of replacing an automotive wheel with one of a larger diameter fitted with a new tire of lower aspect ratio so that the new tire has close to the same diameter and circumference as the original tire to minimize any changes in speedometer accuracy, torque and traction control, while reducing sidewall flex and (generally) increasing cornering ability.

  7. Aluminium–lithium alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium–lithium_alloys

    Aluminium–lithium alloys (Al–Li alloys) are a set of alloys of aluminium and lithium, often also including copper and zirconium. Since lithium is the least dense elemental metal, these alloys are significantly less dense than aluminium. Commercial Al–Li alloys contain up to 2.45% lithium by mass. [1]

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  9. Aluminium–magnesium alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium–magnesium_alloys

    In the case of pure aluminium, the grain size has a minor influence on the strength for metals. In the case of alloys, the influence increases with the alloy content. At 5% Mg, materials with grain sizes of 50 μm achieve uniform elongations of around 0.25, at 250 μm they are around 0.28.