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Walker Evans Beadlock Rims
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Walker Evans Beadlock Rims
Cant seem to get a straight answer from any of my local shops,
Seeing how these rims have a bead lock,
Are they street legal?? Or purely for off road use?
They look the goods..... anything else in the price range better?
Seeing how these rims have a bead lock,
Are they street legal?? Or purely for off road use?
They look the goods..... anything else in the price range better?
Current: FJ62 Awesome Pioneer Sound System UHF CB Roof Cage 4" Suspension Lift Rockcrawler Leafs Rancho 9000x Shocks Snorkel
offroad only and not road legal, go here for the best deal on trail gear wheels, mine should be here in the next couple of weeks.
http://www.locktup4x4.com.au/product/be ... d1919.aspx
http://www.locktup4x4.com.au/product/be ... d1919.aspx
buggy time............
Not that I'm aware of.
Bear in mind too that street legal in the US doesn't mean street legal here.
I saw a set of Mopar/Hutchinson double beadlocks available as a dealer fit accessory on a JK at Wandin -these are street legal in the US but might be a grey area here.
Bear in mind too that street legal in the US doesn't mean street legal here.
I saw a set of Mopar/Hutchinson double beadlocks available as a dealer fit accessory on a JK at Wandin -these are street legal in the US but might be a grey area here.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
rims
if MT's are a fake bead lock, and WE's are a one piece rim, can you tell the difference just by looking at the...
Will the average Joe Blo copper know the difference either way?
Fake bead lock or real.... how do they determine the difference?
Will the average Joe Blo copper know the difference either way?
Fake bead lock or real.... how do they determine the difference?
Current: FJ62 Awesome Pioneer Sound System UHF CB Roof Cage 4" Suspension Lift Rockcrawler Leafs Rancho 9000x Shocks Snorkel
With regards to legality issues......does it really matter about the rims coz unless you running a tyre that is legal (like a 33inch AT!!) then you prolly wouodn't need a beadlocked rim.
OR
is there any point worrying about rim legality when you are prolly trying to fit up a non road worthy tyre??
Jonesy
OR
is there any point worrying about rim legality when you are prolly trying to fit up a non road worthy tyre??
Jonesy
80 series, Locked both ends, Q78ed & a massive 57 k/w to boot!!!!
www.autobalance.com.au
www.autobalance.com.au
Ahhh, that's a good question.
It can be done - the fakelock ring won't have the tyre between the ring and the wheel.... whether the police would get that far or not? Who knows. If you had absolutely no other defectable items on your car, they might have a really good look. 9 times out of 10 though, they'll just get you for no mudflaps... no water in the washer bottle..... tyres not covered, tyres too big...
If you claimed rear beadlocks were fake, they might ask you to pull a ring off
The bigger implication might be to your be to your insurance in the event of a large claim.
I've run mechanical beadlocks for years , and will into the future, but in relation to legality, if you ask, you might not like the answer.
Steve.
It can be done - the fakelock ring won't have the tyre between the ring and the wheel.... whether the police would get that far or not? Who knows. If you had absolutely no other defectable items on your car, they might have a really good look. 9 times out of 10 though, they'll just get you for no mudflaps... no water in the washer bottle..... tyres not covered, tyres too big...
If you claimed rear beadlocks were fake, they might ask you to pull a ring off
The bigger implication might be to your be to your insurance in the event of a large claim.
I've run mechanical beadlocks for years , and will into the future, but in relation to legality, if you ask, you might not like the answer.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
just say you cant as they are fake, and the bolts are molded there helps if u have all chrome or brushed steel and not powder coated how ever by running anything over a 33 like myttuf said, you defeat the purpose of having a legal truck, unless its engineered.
Maverick. Unlocked on 35's MOTTO: Lock, Stomp & Hold on
x2, if there on a decent 4by (not a padock bomb) then i dought there gunna focus on the bolts. the wheels look awesome not whipped up in the garage over a few beers. just run them. dont paint the outer ring as it will draw attention to your bolts.cooki_monsta wrote:just say you cant as they are fake, and the bolts are molded there helps if u have all chrome or brushed steel and not powder coated how ever by running anything over a 33 like myttuf said, you defeat the purpose of having a legal truck, unless its engineered.
lick my vinegary balls.
veeeeryniiiice
veeeeryniiiice
How/where did you get this information? I'm interested, not having a go.big scotty wrote:the walkers are legal but only on commercial so if you have a ute they are fine of course with the right size tyre for the car they are on
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
Fair enough, there's lots of loopholes for commercials. This should, however, mean that any beadlock rim can be engineered as they all only have one circumferential weld in them.
Steve.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
I'm aware of that, but a steel rim is legal with one circumferential weld in it. A steel rim with a mechancial beadlock installed only has one circ weld once installed so is no less legal than a cast alloy rim.
My undertanding of the legal problems with beadlocks is as follows:
They are a "new" rim design as the bead is retained by bolts, and no-one has gone through the ADR approval process for a complete beadlock rim, which involves testing for tyre retention under explosive tyre failure at 80km/h etc (I read the standard years ago.. forgive me if the details are a little sketchy)
If this is not a problem with a bolted beadlock on a commercial vehicle, then whether the inner ring is alloy and cast or steel and welded is irrelevant as a rim can be legal either way. The real issue is the legality of bolts for retaining the bead.
I'm not questioning that a car was passed with them, but the reason the rims were passed shouldn't be because they were walker evans, rather that the engineer accepted that bolted bead retention is safe.
To date, I am not aware of any other engineer (or roads authority in any state) doing this.
Steve.
My undertanding of the legal problems with beadlocks is as follows:
They are a "new" rim design as the bead is retained by bolts, and no-one has gone through the ADR approval process for a complete beadlock rim, which involves testing for tyre retention under explosive tyre failure at 80km/h etc (I read the standard years ago.. forgive me if the details are a little sketchy)
If this is not a problem with a bolted beadlock on a commercial vehicle, then whether the inner ring is alloy and cast or steel and welded is irrelevant as a rim can be legal either way. The real issue is the legality of bolts for retaining the bead.
I'm not questioning that a car was passed with them, but the reason the rims were passed shouldn't be because they were walker evans, rather that the engineer accepted that bolted bead retention is safe.
To date, I am not aware of any other engineer (or roads authority in any state) doing this.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
I think you will find Engineers are like rego checking stations........ Some just pass stuff that are not really legal by the book.
So I suppose technically you may find an engineer to sign off on beadlocks or any other mod for that, but it may not be legal at all.
Thats why I like tough engineers, its one thing getting your truck passed and a whole different story getting it Legal
So I suppose technically you may find an engineer to sign off on beadlocks or any other mod for that, but it may not be legal at all.
Thats why I like tough engineers, its one thing getting your truck passed and a whole different story getting it Legal
Harb
http://www.4wdmonthly.com.au/shed/index.php?id=2244&im=1
http://www.4wdmonthly.com.au/shed/index.php?id=2244&im=1
Hijack -
I am well aware of this. I've had an engineer telling me to run an exhaust in front of the rear wheel on a seb soft top passenger vehicle, which is 100% illegal. (which is what I told him) but he argued it WAS legal and that I was wrong....
Emissions are another BIG grey area.
Sorry for the tangent, but Harb's point it a good one, which is why I asked for grounds the engineer passed the rims on. AFAIK, they aren't legal.
Steve.
I am well aware of this. I've had an engineer telling me to run an exhaust in front of the rear wheel on a seb soft top passenger vehicle, which is 100% illegal. (which is what I told him) but he argued it WAS legal and that I was wrong....
Emissions are another BIG grey area.
Sorry for the tangent, but Harb's point it a good one, which is why I asked for grounds the engineer passed the rims on. AFAIK, they aren't legal.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
Walker evans beadlocks are not DOT approved, only their "street" wheels (fakelocks) are.
AFAIK, only Hutchinson beadlocks are DOT approved.
Steve.
AFAIK, only Hutchinson beadlocks are DOT approved.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
I read between the lines on the website - their "Street" clearly state DOT approval while their beadlocks do not mention DOT at all and are advertised as an "off road" wheel.
That seems pretty clear to me.
Steve.
That seems pretty clear to me.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
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