I'm the one who actually machines and welds these wheels and the picture in the first post is my truck. I machine the LMTV wheels on a CNC VMC using a fixture that uses dowel pins in the holes that hold the two halves of the rim together. The center plate with the 2.5 ton hole pattern is machined on the same VMC from a 3/8 thick blank with the stud holes, center hole and countersinks machined in the same setup. the O.D. of the plate is then turned on a lathe leaving a small lip (approx .040 x.040) like a flange bushing so that when I press them into the wheel they stop on the lip so that the plate is parallel and concentric to the bead seat. Before I weld them I grind the CARC of the inside of the wheel, the heat from welding the inside takes care of the CARC on the outside. Then they're tack welded on the inside, moved to a welding positioner and a large stitch weld is done. Then I flip them and put a continuous weld on the front. Except for the weld, they look a lot like an A3 wheel with 20 studs bolting the halves together instead of 10. We aren't painting them....different folks will want different colors and we can't sell em for what we are if we did. They drive better than the stock NDCCs with less steering wheel movement. With the XMLs, they rub a wee bit on the pitman arm at the steering stop.