February, 2005 Archives - Page 3 of 3 - Tire Review Magazine
Shade of Winter: Vredestein Shows Off Wintrac Xtreme; Growth Plans Heat Up

Vredestein Shows Off Wintrac Xtreme; Growth Plans Heat Up

The Battle Plan: Goodyear Set to Finish in the Black But Won’t Declare Victory Just Yet

Goodyear Set to Finish in the Black But Won’t Declare Victory Just Yet

Parts Fake Out: Counterfeiting a Growing Crime; Tire Dealers Can Be Held Liable

Counterfeiting a Growing Crime; Tire Dealers Can Be Held Liable

Service or Secrets?

Do you remember Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX)? Of course not. But he was the one who introduced the Right to Repair Act (H.R. 2735) on the floor of Congress back in 2001.

Around the Globe

My youngest son, Alex, loved Legos. Still does. For Christmas or his birthday, he would often get those pre-fab Lego kits that would yield a racecar, Space Shuttle, robot, what have you. One quick glance at the instructions and 10 minutes later, he’d be done. So much for the “hours and hours of enjoyment” promised

The Far, Far East

equipment in sight. Looked like an Ohio road construction project. • Very stratified pecking order in most workplaces. Employees know only enough to perform precisely their job. Nothing more. If you ask them for anything beyond that, they have to go find the next guy in the order. • China has re-embraced its ancient cultures,

Chain Gang Rules: Tire Chain Laws

Truckers in heavy-snow states already know how strict tire chain laws can be, but do you?

Eye on Tomorrow: Challenge Bibendum in Shanghai Explores ‘Sustainable Mobility’

Challenge Bibendum in Shanghai Explores ‘Sustainable Mobility’

Expanding Your Turf: There is Growth in the Commercial Lawn/Garden Tire Biz

If you’re an independent tire dealer or wholesaler serving the general public – directly or indirectly – you pay attention to consumer tires. Makes sense. After all, the real volume is in passenger and light truck tire sales. But volume is only one side of the profit equation. It’s no secret that margins in passenger

Back to Basics: Part 1: Beads and Sidewalls and What They Add to Performance

Did you know entry-level tire construction engineers, compounders and designers aren’t allowed to touch a new tire for a year or two? That’s because tire design and development isn’t part of any college curriculum. The making of a competent tire engineer isn’t the job of a college professor. That task belongs to veteran tire company

Flexible Benefit Plan

The concept of limiting the availability of commercial tire tread designs or model types has always been appealing to most fleets, large and small. However, decades have passed since it has been either practical or economical to apply a single tire type to all wheel positions. Nearly all fleets specify specialized tread designs for different

Wheel Anatomy: Part III

In the last of a series of three articles about how different types of wheels are made, we now turn our focus to three-piece designs. What are three-piece wheels? And, what is so great about them? As the name states, this type of wheel is an assembly of three components. Like a two-piece wheel, the