Elan S1 tires
15 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Here in the USA in 2017 165/65/13 tires are getting very hard to find. I currently have Bridgestone RE92 165/65/13 tires fitted, however, they are now 15 years old and no longer available.
I looked in the archives for suggestions, the posts are from 1999 - 2011, and when searching for tires suggested back then, NLA again and again.
Anyone have any suggestions...
Bill H.
I looked in the archives for suggestions, the posts are from 1999 - 2011, and when searching for tires suggested back then, NLA again and again.
Anyone have any suggestions...
Bill H.
Bill H.
1964 Elan S1
1961 Jaguar MK2
1974 Alfa Romeo GTV
1988 Porsche 944t track car
2009 Nissan 370Z
1964 Elan S1
1961 Jaguar MK2
1974 Alfa Romeo GTV
1988 Porsche 944t track car
2009 Nissan 370Z
-
elwood625 - New-tral
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 14 Jan 2017
Bill, I see these for sale on ebay-they are NOS, five years old but never mounted so should not have any UV wear-ten years newer than what you are running now!:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/4-New-165-65-13 ... BI&vxp=mtr
There are other sets of tires by Nexen, Achilles etc on ebay.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/4-New-165-65-13 ... BI&vxp=mtr
There are other sets of tires by Nexen, Achilles etc on ebay.
'65 S2 4844
- Davidb
- Fourth Gear
- Posts: 886
- Joined: 02 Jul 2009
Thank you, I bought them and may use them or store them for the next time. This car has always been garaged and never out more than 10 hrs at a time. I wonder if there is a way of determining tire degradation from time and UV?
Anyone know a way besides Purchase date?
Anyone know a way besides Purchase date?
Bill H.
1964 Elan S1
1961 Jaguar MK2
1974 Alfa Romeo GTV
1988 Porsche 944t track car
2009 Nissan 370Z
1964 Elan S1
1961 Jaguar MK2
1974 Alfa Romeo GTV
1988 Porsche 944t track car
2009 Nissan 370Z
-
elwood625 - New-tral
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 14 Jan 2017
DOT Number indicates month & year of manufacturing, mandatory on every tire (at least in EU and US)
3 number indicate manufacturing before 2000, DOT MYY means month M of year 19YY
4 number indicate manufacturing since 2000, DOT MMYY means month MM of year 20YY
3 number indicate manufacturing before 2000, DOT MYY means month M of year 19YY
4 number indicate manufacturing since 2000, DOT MMYY means month MM of year 20YY
1964 S1 (in boxes)
1967 S3 DHC
1969 S4 FHC
https://theelanman.com for details on Brian Bucklands book.
https://shop.lotus-books.com for more Lotus related books.
We ship worldwide. PM/Email me.
1967 S3 DHC
1969 S4 FHC
https://theelanman.com for details on Brian Bucklands book.
https://shop.lotus-books.com for more Lotus related books.
We ship worldwide. PM/Email me.
- gherlt
- Third Gear
- Posts: 488
- Joined: 20 Jul 2006
Coker Tire has the correct size / vintage style 145R13 Vredestein Sprint Plus radial tires in stock for the Elan. I recently bought a set for my S2. They are priced at $85 each. https://www.cokertire.com/vredestein-sprint-plus.html
Has anyone had success mounting tires on the original early steel wheel without using inner tubes? Coker sells tubes for radial tires but I would prefer to go tubeless if feasible.
Has anyone had success mounting tires on the original early steel wheel without using inner tubes? Coker sells tubes for radial tires but I would prefer to go tubeless if feasible.
- SpeedModel
- First Gear
- Posts: 36
- Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Same here. Never had a problem with tubeless tires on the original rims. I have Yokohama 175/70-13 on there now. They have lots of tread, but they're hard as a rock. I will need to get a new set soon. I can't find anything H rated, though. Any suggestions other than those uber-expensive Michelin XAS?
Herb
26/4618
26/4618
-
lotusS2guy - Second Gear
- Posts: 98
- Joined: 05 Oct 2010
[Has anyone had success mounting tires on the original early steel wheel without using inner tubes? Coker sells tubes for radial tires but I would prefer to go tubeless if feasible.[/quote]
A modern tubeless radial tire and a standard rubber valve stem can be fitted to an early steel Elan wheel without a tube and it will hold air just fine, but it could be potentially dangerous because tubeless tires on tube type tire rims can sustain sudden air loss during high speed cornering. The early Elan steel wheels do not have modern safety bumps (bead humps) on the rim so the beads of a tire with no tube can easily lift off the bead area of the rim causing the tire to suddenly lose all its air, collapse and then shred and come off the wheel which can easily result in total loss of control of the car before it can come to a stop. Modern wheel rims have the required bead humps for tubeless tires so the tire beads stay on the bead seats of the rim so even if the tire has a catastrophic blow out this will allow the driver to bring the car safely to a stop. In essence, you can run a modern tubeless tire on a any suitably sized wheel, but it should have a tube in it if the rim does not have safety bead humps.
Here is a drawing showing cross sections of vintage V.W. tube type (like early Elan) and tubeless type rims showing and describing the differences between the designs:
Dan
A modern tubeless radial tire and a standard rubber valve stem can be fitted to an early steel Elan wheel without a tube and it will hold air just fine, but it could be potentially dangerous because tubeless tires on tube type tire rims can sustain sudden air loss during high speed cornering. The early Elan steel wheels do not have modern safety bumps (bead humps) on the rim so the beads of a tire with no tube can easily lift off the bead area of the rim causing the tire to suddenly lose all its air, collapse and then shred and come off the wheel which can easily result in total loss of control of the car before it can come to a stop. Modern wheel rims have the required bead humps for tubeless tires so the tire beads stay on the bead seats of the rim so even if the tire has a catastrophic blow out this will allow the driver to bring the car safely to a stop. In essence, you can run a modern tubeless tire on a any suitably sized wheel, but it should have a tube in it if the rim does not have safety bead humps.
Here is a drawing showing cross sections of vintage V.W. tube type (like early Elan) and tubeless type rims showing and describing the differences between the designs:
Dan
'66 Elan S2
'05 Lotus Elise
'96 Ferrari F355 GTS
'05 Lotus Elise
'96 Ferrari F355 GTS
- tesprit
- Second Gear
- Posts: 67
- Joined: 13 Sep 2007
Very good point, Dan. I guess I'll continue to run tubes even though the quality of those is pretty poor now days. Wasn't sure I could get away with being tubeless on riveted rims anyway.
I've always gauged tire condition by how much cracking is visible on the tire wall where it flexes. Should be none through to the carcass. Of course that doesn't address the tire compounds becoming hard and less able to grip.
Kurt.
I've always gauged tire condition by how much cracking is visible on the tire wall where it flexes. Should be none through to the carcass. Of course that doesn't address the tire compounds becoming hard and less able to grip.
Kurt.
- nomad
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1048
- Joined: 05 May 2012
Thanks for the explanation and illustrations. I went ahead and ordered a set of radial tubes for my Elan today.
It's probably worth mentioning that the Vredestein Sport 145R13 tires are about the same diameter and width of the tires that were originally fitted to the early Elans.
It's probably worth mentioning that the Vredestein Sport 145R13 tires are about the same diameter and width of the tires that were originally fitted to the early Elans.
- SpeedModel
- First Gear
- Posts: 36
- Joined: 24 Feb 2007
I have Yokohama Radial 379, P165/70R13 789 Radial tires on my S1, which aren't available in the US. They are excellent tires for my car. Has anyone had tires shipped from Europe?
Glen
05 Elise - Back where I started
65 Elan S2 - 26/4055
72 Europa - 74/2358R
69 Elan S4 - 45/7941
64 Elan S1 - 26/0379
12 Colin 30 - Lotus Racing Kart
07 Exige S - Wicked Road/Track Car
07 Exige S - Fast Road/Track Car
06 Elise - Track pack
05 Elise - Back where I started
65 Elan S2 - 26/4055
72 Europa - 74/2358R
69 Elan S4 - 45/7941
64 Elan S1 - 26/0379
12 Colin 30 - Lotus Racing Kart
07 Exige S - Wicked Road/Track Car
07 Exige S - Fast Road/Track Car
06 Elise - Track pack
-
Certified Lotus - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1073
- Joined: 04 Aug 2014
The "J" stamped into the wheel is an indicator of a British Standard tubeless wheel rim. They do not have the bumps as the USA standard spec wheels do, but the Elan wheels w/ the "J" spec are made to accept tubeless tires.
Inside the rim, normally covered by the tire will be stamped "4.50J-13"
Roger
Inside the rim, normally covered by the tire will be stamped "4.50J-13"
Roger
'67 Elan S3 SS DHC
'67 Elan FHC pre-airflow
'67 Elan S3 SE upgrade to 26R by Original owner
'58 Eleven S2 (ex-works)
'62 20/22 FJ (ex-Yamura)
'70 Elan +2S RHD
'61 20 FJ project
'76 Modus M1 F3
'67 Elan FHC pre-airflow
'67 Elan S3 SE upgrade to 26R by Original owner
'58 Eleven S2 (ex-works)
'62 20/22 FJ (ex-Yamura)
'70 Elan +2S RHD
'61 20 FJ project
'76 Modus M1 F3
- Elan45
- Fourth Gear
- Posts: 953
- Joined: 23 Nov 2008
You can still get 165X65X13 in the US at Tires easy:
https://www.tires-easy.com/165-65-13/ac ... 1377-TV000
https://www.tires-easy.com/165-65-13/ac ... 1377-TV000
- zog
- Second Gear
- Posts: 200
- Joined: 15 Nov 2003
Hi all, In acknowledging all that has been said regarding the use of tubeless tyres(tires) on early Lotus rims, it is worth reminding ourselves of the difference between tubeless and tubes when you run over a very thin pointy object such as a tack, particularly at the rear, the tube goes "bang" and you are very busy bringing the car to a standstill hopefully still on the road if lucky BUT the tubeless tire just deflates slowly and if you check your tires regularly you will see it and get it fixed. I just checked my spare rim and it is marked 4.50J 13 ( off my '69 S4)
Cheers
Ian
Cheers
Ian
- LI-599
- Second Gear
- Posts: 62
- Joined: 04 Jul 2012
Another available option is the application of bead sealer, which effectively "glues the tire's ID to the rim at the "bead". This material is generally intended to reduce the possibility of leakage on a corroded rim. I am not suggesting this is good practice, and I run tubes in my own tires, but in a pinch, or in some situations, folks may decide to add bead sealer to make a poor situation better. If you have ever tried to remove a tire with bead sealer under it you will know that it is MUCH harder to break the bead and get the tire off the rim after it is glued on with bead sealer.
1963 Unicorn
1964 S1
1965 S2
1967 S3 SE DHC
Frankentwincam 26R
Seven S2 A
Seven S2 F
1964 S1
1965 S2
1967 S3 SE DHC
Frankentwincam 26R
Seven S2 A
Seven S2 F
- knockoffnut
- Second Gear
- Posts: 219
- Joined: 02 Sep 2011
15 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests