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Wheel Straightening equipment?

Gus_Mahn

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 14, 2007
Messages
75
Location
Chicagoland
Anybody have the equipment for home straightening of alloy car wheels. The roads here are terrible, and I've got two bent wheels. I'd be willing to spend up to $1500 buy something. Local shops charge at least $100 to straighten wheels, so it'd pay for itself pretty quickly.
 
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Gus_Mahn

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 14, 2007
Messages
75
Location
Chicagoland
Maybe l'm all wet, but l would worry about the aluminum cracking??
It's been common practice for quite a while, but I understand that might not make it proper. There are commercial shops who have done these repairs for decades. I believe a little heat helps prevent cracks during the repair, and it is common to weld small cracks during the repair.
 

CJM8515

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Joined
Mar 8, 2014
Messages
9,303
Location
NJ
equipment isnt really the issue, its knowing wtf to do and repair them properly. 100 bucks a wheel is a steal, could do 20 wheels before the stuff paid for itself
 
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Packard V8

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 16, 2009
Messages
7,380
Location
Spokane, WA
Yes, in a medium-sized city, we have two wheel straightening shops. They love all the lifted 2500-series pickups with very-low-profile tires, especially those Chicom dubs on trucks/Escalades/Suburbans. One owner says the profits from straightening these send his whole family to Hawaii for two weeks every winter.

He also loves the extreme trucks shows such as "Texas Metal" build; those grotesque show rigs do a lot to send his shop more business.

jack vines
 
Last edited:

Neggy

Well-known member
Joined
May 30, 2021
Messages
754
for what Keystone sells refurbished wheels for, it is hard to justify the capital expense.

Plus a lot of wheels are being recreated in the aftermarket.

I have used Rimpro out of Tyngsboro MA for insurance claims when I could reach agreement with the shop to do so.



I am not a fan of fixing anything more than minor lip damage or something that just needs to have a clean up cut on the face and a refinishing.

I recently got 4 17" alloy wheels for my Mustang, brand new from Ford for $94 each..... the down side was the $50 core charge ( I hated that when I worked at TASCA Ford parts department) I ate the 200 dollar core charge as I was not parting with a set of wheels with 8300 miles on them....

gt.jpg
 

Packard V8

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 16, 2009
Messages
7,380
Location
Spokane, WA
I recently got 4 17" alloy wheels for my Mustang, brand new from Ford for $94 each..... the down side was the $50 core charge ( I hated that when I worked at TASCA Ford parts department) I ate the 200 dollar core charge as I was not parting with a set of wheels with 8300 miles on them....
So a new wheel purchase from an over-the-counter Ford Parts Department now requires a core charge? Interesting. I've been buying OEM and aftermarket wheels for sixty years and never had to bring a core/pay a core charge other than used wheels from a salvage yard.

jack vines
 

Neggy

Well-known member
Joined
May 30, 2021
Messages
754
So a new wheel purchase from an over-the-counter Ford Parts Department now requires a core charge? Interesting. I've been buying OEM and aftermarket wheels for sixty years and never had to bring a core/pay a core charge other than used wheels from a salvage yard.

jack vines
As far back as 2011, Ford has had core charges on NEW bumper covers, wheels, headlights and other items they do not want falling into the hands of Keystone who repairs/refurbishes them and sells them on their website to the trade.
 
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