i was getting tires put on my aunts car a couple years ago and they priced me cooper tires in that size
i am going to stop saturday and see what they tell me
Yep, checked those, over 1k put on and overnite freight another 500 and ganster w/walls...lol too much for me.! I guess solution is display wheels and tires then another see of 15's for travel...oh well such is life...LOL!
The Hankook H724 is about the only available, reasonably priced, option. One of our CA members had them on his '65 convertible. Claims they work great . . . P215/75R-14 white wall.
The old Cooper Trendsetter SE used to have a P225/75R-14 whitewall that was a very good match for the prior 8.55x14 OEM tires on '65-'68 C-body cars. It went away a good while ago. Latest to the game are the Korean brands, unless you want the $1K price tag for a set of repros?
The std wheel rim was 14x5.5. Some years of station wagons were 14x6.5" So from what I've seen 14x6 is kind of an outlier of sorts. You probably can't tell the difference in handling with a 14x5.5 and 14x6 wheel, I suspect. I found a '65 T&C and got the wheels off of it for my '67 Newport CE23. With some then-NOS 245/70R-14 BFG Advantage TA whitewalls. Same diameter as the old H78x14 size.
After the middle '60s, all tires got wider and we've become a bit jaded in getting used to seeing them, that we've forgotten just how narrow-treated the OEM tires on the '65-era cars were. The old Cooper Trendsetter SE spec'd their tread width at about 5" or so, as I recall. The old rule of thumb used to be that the tread width should be plus/minus 1" from the rim width.
In the spec sheets, there will be a "recommended rim width RANGE". The sizing specs (width, revs/mile, etc.) are usually made on a particular rim width (6"?), which affects ultimate mounted section width of the tire.
Use TireRack for your resource. Many local tire dealers have access into the same brands, so do your own research then then see if they can get the same tires for you. Don't quibble about price unless it's way off. But let them do their best deal first.
In some brands, even the P225/75R-15 size is getting thin on coverage, unless you want a "SUV" tire.
But it appears the H724 is probably the best bet for now in 14" whitewalls.
Enjoy!
CBODY67
The Hankook H724 is about the only available, reasonably priced, option. One of our CA members had them on his '65 convertible. Claims they work great . . . P215/75R-14 white wall.
The old Cooper Trendsetter SE used to have a P225/75R-14 whitewall that was a very good match for the prior 8.55x14 OEM tires on '65-'68 C-body cars. It went away a good while ago. Latest to the game are the Korean brands, unless you want the $1K price tag for a set of repros?
The std wheel rim was 14x5.5. Some years of station wagons were 14x6.5" So from what I've seen 14x6 is kind of an outlier of sorts. You probably can't tell the difference in handling with a 14x5.5 and 14x6 wheel, I suspect. I found a '65 T&C and got the wheels off of it for my '67 Newport CE23. With some then-NOS 245/70R-14 BFG Advantage TA whitewalls. Same diameter as the old H78x14 size.
After the middle '60s, all tires got wider and we've become a bit jaded in getting used to seeing them, that we've forgotten just how narrow-treated the OEM tires on the '65-era cars were. The old Cooper Trendsetter SE spec'd their tread width at about 5" or so, as I recall. The old rule of thumb used to be that the tread width should be plus/minus 1" from the rim width.
In the spec sheets, there will be a "recommended rim width RANGE". The sizing specs (width, revs/mile, etc.) are usually made on a particular rim width (6"?), which affects ultimate mounted section width of the tire.
Use TireRack for your resource. Many local tire dealers have access into the same brands, so do your own research then then see if they can get the same tires for you. Don't quibble about price unless it's way off. But let them do their best deal first.
In some brands, even the P225/75R-15 size is getting thin on coverage, unless you want a "SUV" tire.
But it appears the H724 is probably the best bet for now in 14" whitewalls.
Enjoy!
CBODY67
The Hankook H724 is about the only available, reasonably priced, option. One of our CA members had them on his '65 convertible. Claims they work great . . . P215/75R-14 white wall.
The old Cooper Trendsetter SE used to have a P225/75R-14 whitewall that was a very good match for the prior 8.55x14 OEM tires on '65-'68 C-body cars. It went away a good while ago. Latest to the game are the Korean brands, unless you want the $1K price tag for a set of repros?
The std wheel rim was 14x5.5. Some years of station wagons were 14x6.5" So from what I've seen 14x6 is kind of an outlier of sorts. You probably can't tell the difference in handling with a 14x5.5 and 14x6 wheel, I suspect. I found a '65 T&C and got the wheels off of it for my '67 Newport CE23. With some then-NOS 245/70R-14 BFG Advantage TA whitewalls. Same diameter as the old H78x14 size.
After the middle '60s, all tires got wider and we've become a bit jaded in getting used to seeing them, that we've forgotten just how narrow-treated the OEM tires on the '65-era cars were. The old Cooper Trendsetter SE spec'd their tread width at about 5" or so, as I recall. The old rule of thumb used to be that the tread width should be plus/minus 1" from the rim width.
In the spec sheets, there will be a "recommended rim width RANGE". The sizing specs (width, revs/mile, etc.) are usually made on a particular rim width (6"?), which affects ultimate mounted section width of the tire.
Use TireRack for your resource. Many local tire dealers have access into the same brands, so do your own research then then see if they can get the same tires for you. Don't quibble about price unless it's way off. But let them do their best deal first.
In some brands, even the P225/75R-15 size is getting thin on coverage, unless you want a "SUV" tire.
But it appears the H724 is probably the best bet for now in 14" whitewalls.
Enjoy!
CBODY67