Period Correct Tire Widths, Engines and Rules
Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:45 am
Hey Gents!
I typed all the following up in another post in response to a photo of a kart owned by a very nice guy. He has even bought parts from me. I won't mention the owner's name or kart. I think the topics of correct tire widths, correct engines and rules in general needs to be addressed. They probably have before. I did a search on this site and did not turn up much about it, so here it goes. The names have been changed, as whom I addressed is not important. The topics are important.
Hi Mr. Kart Racer,
I don't mean any disrespect or to say that you don't remember correctly what you did so many years ago. The kart is yours and you can do what you want to it. It does look great! I can relate to the kart not being stock, but it is not truly representative of a vintage kart. It is more like a hot rodder kart or monster kart. Karts like that have their place, but not at a vintage kart meet.
I want to continue to learn about the history of our great sport. I am going to rant a bit here, just because too many people don't seem to take the vintage kart thing seriously enough. We are suppose to be doing it like it was done back in the day.
I think that is a curious and intriguing comment you made about using 6" wide recaps on a kart in the early 60s. I understand that kart tires were borrowed from the midget racers of the time. Did they make 6" wide tires for the midgets in 1962? I DON'T KNOW, BUT I WANT TO KNOW. I have always wondered when the tire manufacturers began making the 6" wide tires. I was not there in the early 60s since I was born in 1964 and started racing karts in 1979 with 6" wide Goodyear Blue Streak rear tires and 3.5" wide front tires on my 1969 Blackhawk.
All the period photos I have ever seen of karts from 1956 to about 1966 had the narrow 3" to 3.5" wide rear tires. Margay brochures tell in their specs of using 4.5" wide rear tires around 1968.
I don't think 6" wide rear tires were used in sanctioned organized kart racing until around 1969. I don't mind being corrected on this. I want to know the truth. The world wants to know so vintage karting can be accurately portrayed. Other racers feel free to tell what width rear tires you remember using. What year did you start using 6" wide rear tires?
Can someone whom use to work for Goodyear, Firestone, General, Allstate or any kart tire company chime in and tell us the whole story? Which company made what width tires in which years?
In any case, you can lump me in with the purists because I believe that to truthfully and accurately represent vintage karting to the world, you need to race them with the size tires the sanctioning body allowed in the given year the kart was built.
It is WRONG to allow the Monster Karts with the aftermarket spun aluminum mono wheels with 4.5" wide tires on the front and 6" wide tires on the rear on a kart built in say 1962 when the tires did not exist. Did they exist in 1962? If they did, they were not run, so run them like they did in 1962 sanctioned races. The wide spun wheels did not exist. Period. Then there is the bad handling, bicycling, chassis cracking and safety issue of wide sticky tires on a kart designed for hard skinny tires.
Another rant I have is when you take a 1962 built kart and put a 1968 blueprinted and modified MC91 on it just because the guy wants to go as fast as possible. The engine did not exist when the kart was built, so it should not be allowed on the kart. Period.
Allowing karts to run that way is a gross mis-representation of how the karts were run back in the day. Even if wider tires were available, they were not used, as seen in any photos you care to dig up from a sanctioned early to late 60s karting event.
Again Mr. Kart Racer, I hope no feathers were ruffled. I mean no harm. I relate vintage karting to Civil War re-enactments. The war guys are dressing and doing things the same way they were done in say 1864 when they re-enact the battle of Gettysburg. When we put on a vintage kart event, we should be doing things exactly how they were done, according to the rulebook in say 1964 or whatever year you pick.
If people want to put the wide spun wheels and wide sticky tires on their 60s racing kart with an over-powered non-period correct engine, then they need to go create their own Monster Kart or Hot Rodder Kart race series. Don't call them vintage karts because they are not.
Does anybody have a stash of old kart magazines from the 60s? Can you research and find kart tire ads showing 6" wide tires being available for sanctioned kart racing? What year do the ads show the 6" rear tires being available? Does anybody have a copy of a rulebook from 1961? 1964? 1969? Find those old rulebooks and run the karts like they ran them for the years the karts were built. Period.
Thanks for allowing me my soapbox time, just my two cents worth, as a guy in CT likes to say...
Kind Regards, Joe
I typed all the following up in another post in response to a photo of a kart owned by a very nice guy. He has even bought parts from me. I won't mention the owner's name or kart. I think the topics of correct tire widths, correct engines and rules in general needs to be addressed. They probably have before. I did a search on this site and did not turn up much about it, so here it goes. The names have been changed, as whom I addressed is not important. The topics are important.
Hi Mr. Kart Racer,
I don't mean any disrespect or to say that you don't remember correctly what you did so many years ago. The kart is yours and you can do what you want to it. It does look great! I can relate to the kart not being stock, but it is not truly representative of a vintage kart. It is more like a hot rodder kart or monster kart. Karts like that have their place, but not at a vintage kart meet.
I want to continue to learn about the history of our great sport. I am going to rant a bit here, just because too many people don't seem to take the vintage kart thing seriously enough. We are suppose to be doing it like it was done back in the day.
I think that is a curious and intriguing comment you made about using 6" wide recaps on a kart in the early 60s. I understand that kart tires were borrowed from the midget racers of the time. Did they make 6" wide tires for the midgets in 1962? I DON'T KNOW, BUT I WANT TO KNOW. I have always wondered when the tire manufacturers began making the 6" wide tires. I was not there in the early 60s since I was born in 1964 and started racing karts in 1979 with 6" wide Goodyear Blue Streak rear tires and 3.5" wide front tires on my 1969 Blackhawk.
All the period photos I have ever seen of karts from 1956 to about 1966 had the narrow 3" to 3.5" wide rear tires. Margay brochures tell in their specs of using 4.5" wide rear tires around 1968.
I don't think 6" wide rear tires were used in sanctioned organized kart racing until around 1969. I don't mind being corrected on this. I want to know the truth. The world wants to know so vintage karting can be accurately portrayed. Other racers feel free to tell what width rear tires you remember using. What year did you start using 6" wide rear tires?
Can someone whom use to work for Goodyear, Firestone, General, Allstate or any kart tire company chime in and tell us the whole story? Which company made what width tires in which years?
In any case, you can lump me in with the purists because I believe that to truthfully and accurately represent vintage karting to the world, you need to race them with the size tires the sanctioning body allowed in the given year the kart was built.
It is WRONG to allow the Monster Karts with the aftermarket spun aluminum mono wheels with 4.5" wide tires on the front and 6" wide tires on the rear on a kart built in say 1962 when the tires did not exist. Did they exist in 1962? If they did, they were not run, so run them like they did in 1962 sanctioned races. The wide spun wheels did not exist. Period. Then there is the bad handling, bicycling, chassis cracking and safety issue of wide sticky tires on a kart designed for hard skinny tires.
Another rant I have is when you take a 1962 built kart and put a 1968 blueprinted and modified MC91 on it just because the guy wants to go as fast as possible. The engine did not exist when the kart was built, so it should not be allowed on the kart. Period.
Allowing karts to run that way is a gross mis-representation of how the karts were run back in the day. Even if wider tires were available, they were not used, as seen in any photos you care to dig up from a sanctioned early to late 60s karting event.
Again Mr. Kart Racer, I hope no feathers were ruffled. I mean no harm. I relate vintage karting to Civil War re-enactments. The war guys are dressing and doing things the same way they were done in say 1864 when they re-enact the battle of Gettysburg. When we put on a vintage kart event, we should be doing things exactly how they were done, according to the rulebook in say 1964 or whatever year you pick.
If people want to put the wide spun wheels and wide sticky tires on their 60s racing kart with an over-powered non-period correct engine, then they need to go create their own Monster Kart or Hot Rodder Kart race series. Don't call them vintage karts because they are not.
Does anybody have a stash of old kart magazines from the 60s? Can you research and find kart tire ads showing 6" wide tires being available for sanctioned kart racing? What year do the ads show the 6" rear tires being available? Does anybody have a copy of a rulebook from 1961? 1964? 1969? Find those old rulebooks and run the karts like they ran them for the years the karts were built. Period.
Thanks for allowing me my soapbox time, just my two cents worth, as a guy in CT likes to say...
Kind Regards, Joe