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1989 M923A2 MRAP Aluminum Wheels.

red

Active member
1,988
22
38
Location
Eagle Mountain/Utah
Centrifugal force. I've done it with a few different vehicles/tires and it's always worked. Below about 20mph it has no effect, tires are not spinning fast enough for the balancing media to 'stick' to the tire through a full rotation but at those speeds it doesn't matter anyways.

If you used solid media in these tires it won't work because of the tar. The BB's/powder would clump up and get stuck creating a heavy spot and throwing the tire out of balance even worse.
 

Special T

Member
495
21
18
Location
Wetside/ WA
Centrifical force move the liquid to where it's most effective. In aircraft tires they use balancing patches put on the inside in the middle of the tread. The advantage to liquid is that you can't spin the balancing weights on the wheel and as a Tire wears it's point of balance does also. I wouldn't think you need more than a quart of fluid per Tire 2lbs is a lot when it's distributed along the tread on the inside. You need more weight the closer to the center of the hub you get
 
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