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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Great share, but I still refuse to buy Firestone tires. Goes back to brand new 1968 GTO with factory installed Firestone Wide Oval Tires. Had to replace at around 8,000 miles because tread was entirely gone on all 4 tires.
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LTC Stephen C.
LTC Stephen C.
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen, I was a tread applicator at the Uniroyal plant at Opelika, AL in the mid-seventies (it was my second go round Auburn and I was paying the tab!). I learned that virtually every tire manufacturer makes tires in the same way. The tread is made of synthetic rubber and the sidewalls are made of natural rubber.
Why, you might ask?!
The manufacturer did not want the sidewalls to fail, but wanted the tread to wear down at determined rate. Natural rubber would last much longer!
I don’t know if that’s what they,still do, but that’s what happened way back when!
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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LTC Stephen C. Makes perfect sense. Those wide ovals weren't around long so suspect Firestone discovered their formula wore down too quickly.
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Sgt Commander, Dav Chapter #90
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SGT (Join to see) - Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, & Harvey Firestone were friends & business collaboraters... In order for Henry Ford to manufacture volume cars, He needed tires. In comes Thomas Edison & Harvey Firestone!
Edison did the rubber tire material & Firestone the tire manufacturing process. The Edison-Ford Homes & Museum, in Fort Myers, FL has a wealth of exhibits on cars, rubber tires, Lights, telephones, & so, so much more, including the adjacent Winter homes of Edison & Ford... It is awesome, David!
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SPC Douglas Bolton
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SGT (Join to see) I am a Cost Co person myself.
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