ShakyCraftsman Posted Friday at 06:45 PM Posted Friday at 06:45 PM Any interest In a compiled list of available different rubber tires in 1/25 & 1/24 scale? I have 18 right now, all that I have on hand at the moment. 🤔🤔 Ron G 3
ShakyCraftsman Posted Friday at 09:25 PM Author Posted Friday at 09:25 PM So nobody is interested in this. Inner diameter (wheel opening), width and diameter. Really! I would think everyone would be interested in this. It's great for planning a build so you know what fits and what doesn't. Ron G 1
Gary Chastain Posted Friday at 11:45 PM Posted Friday at 11:45 PM I am always interested in more knowledge, post it up, then I can print it for my notes book. 1
ShakyCraftsman Posted Saturday at 12:01 AM Author Posted Saturday at 12:01 AM Okay, Gary as soon as I get it done I will post it up. Ron G 1
Brenton Posted Saturday at 12:36 AM Posted Saturday at 12:36 AM Bring it on!!! Very interesting and useful! Thank you! 2
ShakyCraftsman Posted Saturday at 01:21 AM Author Posted Saturday at 01:21 AM (edited) Okay, I did this on my phone with the note app, so it ain't the greatest. I am eventually going to do it on a computer with a word processing program so it will hzve more info per tire and possibly pictures of each tire. This is organized by the smallest diameter tire to the largest diameter tire. Like I said I will eventually improve this. But for now here you go. Oh, (Paul) is St Supply Edited Saturday at 01:49 AM by ShakyCraftsman 5 1
Biggu Posted Saturday at 01:28 AM Posted Saturday at 01:28 AM Thanks for this Ron. I know a lot of work went into this comprehensive list. This is a great piece of useful information that will help with the purchase of the aftermarket wheels and tires ! Well done. Thanks for you hard work ! 1
Force Posted Saturday at 05:57 AM Posted Saturday at 05:57 AM Good work. Now I have to convert it to metric for it to make sence to me as I find fractions and decimals of inches very confusing.
ShakyCraftsman Posted Saturday at 07:16 AM Author Posted Saturday at 07:16 AM 1 hour ago, Force said: Good work. Now I have to convert it to metric for it to make sence to me as I find fractions and decimals of inches very confusing. Yeah, I did it in English units because most of the tires were in English. So for those that don't know if you have English dimensions multiply by 25.4 and you get metric dimensions. And with Metric dimensions divide by 25.4 to get English dimensions. I did this all day long when I was doing auto engineering, 40 years ago. Ron G
stitchdup Posted Saturday at 07:27 AM Posted Saturday at 07:27 AM 7 minutes ago, ShakyCraftsman said: Yeah, I did it in English units because most of the tires were in English. So for those that don't know if you have English dimensions multiply by 25.4 and you get metric dimensions. And with Metric dimensions divide by 25.4 to get English dimensions. I did this all day long when I was doing auto engineering, 40 years ago. Ron G do you mean imperial units? as ft and inches?
ShakyCraftsman Posted Saturday at 07:28 AM Author Posted Saturday at 07:28 AM Just now, stitchdup said: do you mean imperial units? as ft and inches? Yes, that is what I mean. 1
stitchdup Posted Saturday at 07:29 AM Posted Saturday at 07:29 AM Just now, ShakyCraftsman said: Yes, that is what I mean. thanks, i've never heard them referred to as english units before
ShakyCraftsman Posted Saturday at 07:31 AM Author Posted Saturday at 07:31 AM 1 minute ago, stitchdup said: thanks, i've never heard them referred to as english units before That's what we called them her in the states. 1
Jürgen M. Posted Saturday at 10:11 AM Posted Saturday at 10:11 AM Wow! Thanks! That's a really helpful list! Just when I started designing my own tires! 😂 That must have been quite an effort making that list! I really do appreciate it. 1
Gary Chastain Posted Saturday at 02:43 PM Posted Saturday at 02:43 PM Good stuff/info, very useful, thank you. 1
Force Posted Sunday at 03:54 PM Posted Sunday at 03:54 PM On 4/26/2025 at 9:16 AM, ShakyCraftsman said: Yeah, I did it in English units because most of the tires were in English. So for those that don't know if you have English dimensions multiply by 25.4 and you get metric dimensions. And with Metric dimensions divide by 25.4 to get English dimensions. I did this all day long when I was doing auto engineering, 40 years ago. Ron G Yes I know how to do it, it just takes time. But I never heard the term English unit before, just standard for the inch and metric. I hope you don't think I don't appreciate your work because I really do...and the conversion bit is not a big deal, I'm used to it.
ShakyCraftsman Posted Sunday at 04:18 PM Author Posted Sunday at 04:18 PM English Imperial all the same. Potato patato. Depends on what country, county, city you are from. No problems only part. Ron G 1
cifenet Posted Sunday at 05:52 PM Posted Sunday at 05:52 PM Excellent information! Appreciate the effort and initiative. 👍 1
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