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1980 F350 4X4 C6 Project


Atlas75

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Thanks Gary! I’ll try that as soon as it decides to stop raining for 30 min or so!

As far as tires are concerned…according to the door sticker my truck originally had 9.5 x 16.5 tires. It currently has 12 x 16.5 tires. Is there a converter anywhere that will show an equivalent size in modern nomenclature for a 16 inch wheel?

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As far as tires are concerned…according to the door sticker my truck originally had 9.5 x 16.5 tires. It currently has 12 x 16.5 tires. Is there a converter anywhere that will show an equivalent size in modern nomenclature for a 16 inch wheel?

There's no number before the 12?

Usually it would be something like 33x12 R16.5

12" is 300mm wide (more or less) but you need OD or rolling circumference in addition to width and rim size.

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There's no number before the 12?

Usually it would be something like 33x12 R16.5

12" is 300mm wide (more or less) but you need OD or rolling circumference in addition to width and rim size.

These are the only size marks on the tire.

5CB7669C-8655-47B9-A1CB-4E5828702E43.thumb.jpeg.e74f2d5a682dda11e695b043e4bbcecd.jpeg

472A797B-E523-48EC-9BFA-F0A035DE79F4.thumb.jpeg.2d959fdf5676559dc9c3dc094ba46c87.jpeg

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These are the only size marks on the tire.

I imagine you can measure diameter yourself if you're only looking for a tire that won't effect your speedometer.

I don't recall any '83 or later trucks having 16 1/2" rims, as the world was moving away from that size.

Later trucks came with skinny (pizza cutter) 235/85 R-16 E rated tires.

A 300mm width is going to be wanting a wider rim than stock.

Any tire website should have a spreadsheet that shows circumference or reveloutions per mile.

 

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I imagine you can measure diameter yourself if you're only looking for a tire that won't effect your speedometer.

I don't recall any '83 or later trucks having 16 1/2" rims, as the world was moving away from that size.

Later trucks came with skinny (pizza cutter) 235/85 R-16 E rated tires.

A 300mm width is going to be wanting a wider rim than stock.

Any tire website should have a spreadsheet that shows circumference or reveloutions per mile.

12-16.5 is just shy of 33" (32.8" I think) hate to say this but do yourself a favor and get rid of the 16.5 wheels, almost no one makes tires for them. A 33x12.50R16 or 17 will be roughly the same size, you should be able to find some cheap steel wheels or used aluminum.

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12-16.5 is just shy of 33" (32.8" I think) hate to say this but do yourself a favor and get rid of the 16.5 wheels, almost no one makes tires for them. A 33x12.50R16 or 17 will be roughly the same size, you should be able to find some cheap steel wheels or used aluminum.

So a 285/75 R16 would be the closest if I did my math right?

285x.75=213.75x2=427.5

16x25.4=406.4

406.4+427.5=833.9/25.4=32.8 ? :nabble_thinking-26_orig:

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So a 285/75 R16 would be the closest if I did my math right?

285x.75=213.75x2=427.5

16x25.4=406.4

406.4+427.5=833.9/25.4=32.8 ? :nabble_thinking-26_orig:

12x16.5 is 32.8"x 12.5" so a 33x12.5r16 would be an exact match. 285/75r16 is same height but I think only 11" wide.

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12x16.5 is 32.8"x 12.5" so a 33x12.5r16 would be an exact match. 285/75r16 is same height but I think only 11" wide.

285 is very close to 11 1/4", but we all know that tread or carcass width is affected by rim width, inflation pressure and more.

I am not well versed in off-road tires or even imperial sized tires.

So I appreciate your comments. :nabble_smiley_good:

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I tried adjusting the wrench about every I could to get rid of the bubbles. I will try the grease and see what that does.

If that works and there are no more bubbles but the pedal is still soft, are we looking at master cylinder?

I am fighting some brake bleeding on my truck currently too, so I feel your pain.

Sometimes letting them gravity bleed helps, at least in my experience. You can do this while you work on something else in the shop while not getting your temper too flared up... unless of course you let the master cylinder run dry which is why I stay in the shop while I let them bleed. If you're like me and you go do something somewhere else you will surely come back frantically to a dry master.

And as Gary mentioned sometimes you gotta just drive it around, and bleed, and drive around, and bleed...

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I am fighting some brake bleeding on my truck currently too, so I feel your pain.

Sometimes letting them gravity bleed helps, at least in my experience. You can do this while you work on something else in the shop while not getting your temper too flared up... unless of course you let the master cylinder run dry which is why I stay in the shop while I let them bleed. If you're like me and you go do something somewhere else you will surely come back frantically to a dry master.

And as Gary mentioned sometimes you gotta just drive it around, and bleed, and drive around, and bleed...

those 12-16.5 are real old like probably early 80's, I think they still use those sizes on skidsteers.

As for your brakes make sure your not having a problem with the proportioning valve I have had a few of these cause problems with bleeding especially on trucks that sat for long periods. Another trick on bleeding the brakes that I have found works is pump up the pedal and then have someone open the bleeder while you are not holding pressure and then stab the pedal to the floor. If you are not getting good flow try to bleed a front brake then go back to the rear sometimes this will reset the proportioning valve.

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