A drop center steel disc type rim ( for a tubeless truck tire 11:00 x 24.5 " ) used on many trucks. With dayton spokes on the truck hub. My guess that it weighs around 65 lbs. However a standard 3 pc rim 24" x 8.5" rim for a tube type tire. May weigh around 100 lbs. They are heavier but they can carry a lot more weight. If you have budd style rims ( wich have a full disc w/ bolt holes like a car ) they will run a little more.
We run 5 class # 8 trucks ( heavy duty dump trucks ) in our fleet
hope this helps, mr norm
A wheel from a big rig may weigh over 150 to 200 lbs, including the tire, rim and wheel well. Semi-truck tires often weigh around 80 to 100 lbs.
Depends on wheel size. Trucks run typically a 24.5 or 22.5 wheel in steel or aluminum. In steel they weigh about 80 lbs and in aluminum about 50 lbs.
weighs about 500 pounds with rim
With no rim, aprox 100 lbs.
Well over a hundred pounds.
Alcoa site says 59lbs per single aluminum wheel (rim only, no tire mounted), at a savings of 30 lbs per wheel over steel wheels.
the 16 inch steel rim is about 9.4kg
10 pounds
A rim or a wheel.
~119 - 125 lbs, depending on the exact tire/application/ply.
The rims weigh about 60 lbs or more each. It depends on the manufacturer.
The part of a truck that is considered the rim is the metal round portion of the tire that the actual rubber fits around. The rim is connected to the actual bar that controls the motion of the wheels.