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  2. Airless tire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airless_tire

    Airless tires are attractive to cyclists, as bicycle tires are much more vulnerable to punctures than motor vehicle tires. The drawbacks to airless tires depend on the use. Heavy equipment operators who use machinery with solid tires may become fatigued. Any airless tire will be heavier than the rubber tire it is meant to replace.

  3. Tweel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweel

    The Tweel airless tire design. The Tweel (a portmanteau of tire and wheel) is an airless tire design developed by the French tire company Michelin.Its significant advantage over pneumatic tires is that the Tweel does not use a bladder full of compressed air, and therefore cannot burst, leak pressure, or become flat.

  4. Lee Tire and Rubber Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Tire_and_Rubber_Company

    The company was incorporated in 1911 as the successor of the J Ellwood Lee Company established in 1883. Lee manufactured puncture-proof pneumatic tires, regular tires, and rubber sundries. Garthwaite Stadium in Conshohocken is named for the former president, A. A. Garthwaite. [3] This complex was added to the National Register of Historic ...

  5. Tubeless tire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubeless_tire

    A tubeless tire (also spelled as tubeless tyre in Commonwealth English) is a pneumatic tire that does not require a separate inner tube.. Unlike pneumatic tires which use a separate inner tube, tubeless tires have continuous ribs molded integrally into the bead of the tire that are forced by air pressure into a flange on the metal rim of the wheel, sealing the tire to the rim.

  6. Run-flat tire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run-flat_tire

    A run-flat tire is a pneumatic vehicle tire designed to resist the effects of deflation when punctured, allowing the vehicle to continue to be driven at reduced speeds for limited distances. First developed by tire manufacturer Michelin in the 1930s, run-flat tires were introduced to the public market in the 1980s.

  7. Wheelbarrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheelbarrow

    Modern day wheelbarrows are generally made from plastic or metal [36] and generally come with either a pneumatic tire, semi-pneumatic tire, or solid tire. Modern wheelbarrows come in four standard shapes, the home gardener shallow-tray variety, the builder's barrow, the square tray utility barrow [37] and the brick barrow. [38]