I recently purchased some crazy looking old hot rod brakes, and they came with these skinny chrome slot wheels. Can anyone ID what brand these are besides "Generic"? They are steel, 15x4“, 5x5.5” bolt pattern, with 1” x 3.5” slots. The caps are plain bullets. The following marks are on the backside: 15 E FORD M 448
I'd be willing to bet those originally came on a trailer. The 5-on-5.5 bolt pattern is common on the larger trailers. And trailer manufacturers are known to have inexpensive versions of 'custom' wheels made for their own use as optional upgrade wheels. The 'backwards' dish of the centers will probably prevent those from fitting in a lot of automotive applications.
Naw, I don't think they are off a trailer. Why would they put E Ford on there? I bet that stands for "E"arly Ford. And of course the 15 is the diameter.
The rear surface is actually flat and seems pretty well centered in the rim, although I didn't bother measuring the backspacing. I don't think they've have a problem fitting under the front fenders of something like a '32 Ford. They are narrow.
They're not Appliance since they used a seperate retaining ring for the lug nuts to seat against. Your wheels look thick in the middle so you can tighten tapered lug nuts against it. Shore Calnevar? I also agree that they are cool...
Yeah, they're a bit thicker in the middle and then the lug holes are machined with a bit of a counterbore and tapered seat.
They look like the spare wheels off of a crown vic, around 96-02 style,I doubt thats what they are,OEM wheels normally werent that narrow. Harvey
Back in 1991 I had a set of centerline 10 hole aluminum wheels on a new short bed Chevy that were damaged in an “incident”.The wheel had been replaced by a Centerline 10 hole aluminum truck wheel that had a steel insert between the two half’s at the hole pattern like your wheels. Cool score there. Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
OK that was my next post that I would have made. I could learn to live with those crazy looking fronts.