ThrottleVault Technical Guide

Wheels
& Rims

Bolt patterns, offset, backspacing, materials, finishes, Cerakote coatings, safety specs, and the correct fitment for every classic build. Everything you need to pick the right wheel the first time.

7 sections Classic car fitment guide Torque reference tables

Contents

Bolt Pattern Reference

The bolt pattern is the most critical fitment dimension on a wheel. Get it wrong and the wheel won't mount. Get it right and half the fitment conversation is over. Bolt patterns are expressed as the number of bolts × the bolt circle diameter — 5×4.75" means five lug holes on a 4.75-inch bolt circle.

American bolt patterns are typically expressed in inches; metric equivalents are used for imports and increasingly for reference. 5×120.65mm = 5×4.75" — these are the same pattern, different units.

Pattern Metric Equivalent Primary Applications Notes
5×4.5" 5×114.3mm '65–'70 Mustang, Mercury Cougar, Mopar B-body (Charger, Coronet, Road Runner), early Camaro ('67–'68) Ford standard through the muscle car era. Also used on Mopar A/B/E body.
5×4.75" 5×120.65mm '64–'72 Chevelle, GTO, Tempest, Nova, '67–'69 Camaro (post first year), '55–'57 Chevy, Corvette (through '82) The dominant GM muscle car bolt pattern. Most common pattern for performance street builds.
5×5" 5×127mm Full-size GM cars (Impala, Biscayne, Caprice), C10/C20 trucks, Jeep CJ and YJ, early AMC Larger bolt circle for heavier vehicles. Also seen on first-gen Camaro Z/28 with wide 5 pattern.
4×4.5" 4×114.3mm Early Falcon, Fairlane, and Comet; early Mustang (pre-'65) Four-lug Ford. Less common in the ThrottleVault catalog but worth knowing.
5×4.5" Wide 5 Early Camaro Z/28, early drag racing applications, Halibrand and knockoff wheel fitments Not the same as standard 5×4.5". The "Wide 5" is a different bolt circle — measure before ordering.
How to Measure Your Bolt Pattern

5-lug: Measure from the center of one bolt to the outer edge of the bolt directly across from it. This is the "across flats" measurement. For 5×4.75", that distance is approximately 4.75". A bolt circle gauge makes this foolproof.

4-lug: Measure center-to-center of directly opposing bolts. Straightforward.

When in doubt: Pull a stock wheel and take it to a shop with a bolt pattern gauge. One hour of verification prevents a $600 mistake.

Offset & Backspacing

Offset and backspacing both describe the same thing from different reference points: how far the wheel's mounting face sits from the wheel centerline. They determine whether the wheel tucks inside the fender or pokes out beyond it — and whether it clears your brakes.

Offset

Offset is the distance in millimeters from the wheel's mounting face to its true centerline (half the overall width). Positive offset means the mounting face is toward the outside of the wheel — the wheel sits more inside the fender. Negative offset means the mounting face is toward the inside — the wheel pokes out.

Zero offset (0mm): Mounting face is exactly at the center of the wheel width. Common on vintage wheels and steel rallye designs. The correct starting point for most classic car builds.

|←——— Overall Width (e.g. 7") ———→|
| | | |
Inboard Center Mount Face Outboard
edge (3.5" in) (3.5" in) edge
ZERO OFFSET: Mount face = centerline
+15mm OFFSET: Mount face moves 15mm toward outboard
-15mm OFFSET: Mount face moves 15mm toward inboard (wheel pokes out)
Simplified cross-section — not to scale. Inner fender is to the left.

Backspacing

Backspacing is the distance from the wheel's mounting face to its inboard edge, measured in inches. Higher backspacing = mounting face further from the inner fender = more wheel tucked inside. Lower backspacing = wheel pokes out more.

The relationship: Backspace (inches) = (Width/2) + (Offset in inches). For a 7-inch wide wheel at 0mm offset: backspace = 3.5 + 0 = 3.5 inches. At +6mm offset (~+0.24"): backspace ≈ 3.74 inches. The two measurements describe the same physical position.

Wheel Width Offset Backspace Typical Application
14×60mm3.0"Stock restoration, factory look
15×70mm3.5"Rallye/performance upgrade, most classic cars
15×7+6mm3.74"Tighter tuck, works with most factory fenders
15×80mm4.0"Wide rear tire, standard fender clearance
15×8-6mm3.76"Slight outward poke — restomod look, verify clearance
15×10-25mm3.52"Drag race rear — requires tubs or flares
⚠ Check Before You Buy

Inner fender clearance: Measure from your hub face to the inner fender/frame at the closest point. Your backspacing must leave clearance for the tire sidewall at full suspension compression — not just static ride height.

Outer fender clearance: At full lock (steering), the front tire must not contact the fender or bump stop. Run a string line or use cardboard templates before committing to a wheel width.

Brake caliper clearance: On disc brake conversions, the caliper is often the closest obstacle. A wheel with too-low backspacing will contact the caliper hat or anchor bracket. Verify with the caliper manufacturer's clearance spec.

Wheel Materials

Every material in wheel construction is a tradeoff between weight, strength, repairability, cost, and aesthetics. There's no universally best option — only the best option for your specific build and use case.

Stamped Steel

  • ✓ Lowest cost
  • ✓ Repairable when bent
  • ✓ Period-correct for restoration
  • ✓ Can be re-welded or straightened
  • ~ Heavier (~18–22 lbs per 15×7)
  • ~ Requires paint/coating
  • ✗ Rusts if finish damaged
  • ✗ No high-end visual options

Cast Aluminum

  • ✓ Lighter than steel (~12–16 lbs)
  • ✓ DOT certified, road legal
  • ✓ Good finish options
  • ✓ Hub-centric options available
  • ~ Not repairable when cracked
  • ~ Quality varies by alloy
  • ✗ A380 alloy is brittle vs A356
  • ✗ Cannot be straightened like steel

Forged Aluminum

  • ✓ Strongest aluminum option
  • ✓ Lightest finished weight (~10–13 lbs)
  • ✓ Grain structure follows wheel shape
  • ✓ Premium street and track use
  • ~ 2–3× cost of cast
  • ~ Overkill for street-only builds
  • ✗ Not period-correct for vintage cars
  • ✗ Limited retro styling options

Billet Aluminum

  • ✓ CNC precision — tightest tolerances
  • ✓ Hub-centric bore as machined
  • ✓ Maximum visual customization
  • ✓ Best for show and restomod builds
  • ~ Heavier than forged (more material)
  • ~ Highest cost
  • ✗ Premium price for street use
  • ✗ Chips can expose raw aluminum
Cast Aluminum Alloy Grades

A356 aluminum (the good stuff): Used in ThrottleVault cast wheels. Heat-treatable to T6 temper, which improves yield strength by ~50% over as-cast. Ductile enough to absorb impact without catastrophic failure. Ask your wheel supplier which alloy they use — if they don't know, that's your answer.

A380 aluminum (the cheap stuff): Common in discount wheels. Better fluidity for complex casts, but cannot be heat-treated for strength improvement. More brittle at impact. Fine for decoration; not ideal for vehicles that corner.

Finish Options

The wheel finish determines both the look and the maintenance burden. Chrome turns heads and demands attention. Powder coat is the daily driver. Cerakote is the performance coater's choice. Here's how they stack up:

Finish Description Durability Maintenance Cost (relative)
Chrome (triple plate) Copper + nickel + chrome electroplating. Deep wet look, maximum shine. Medium High — pits behind wheel, must dry and polish regularly $$$
Powder Coat Electrostatic polyester/epoxy coating, oven cured at ~400°F. Any color. High Low — soap and water, re-spray spot repairs $$
Cerakote Ceramic Polymer-ceramic compound, thin film (<1 mil), baked at 250–300°F. Extreme hardness. Very High Very low — chemically resistant, easy to clean $$$
Polished Aluminum Machine-polished to mirror finish. No coating, raw aluminum surface. Low High — oxidizes, requires quarterly polishing $$
Painted (body color) Basecoat/clearcoat, same as body paint. Period-correct for factory OEM look. Medium Medium — chips require touch-up, clear fades over time $$
Argent Silver Bare steel sprayed with silver/gray lacquer. Factory muscle car original look. Low-Med Medium — chips rust on steel, repaint every few years $
"Chrome belongs on show cars that ride in trailers. Powder coat belongs on everything else. Cerakote belongs on anything that gets driven hard and hosed down afterward."

Cerakote & Refinishing Guide

Cerakote is a polymer-ceramic coating developed by NIC Industries originally for firearms — and that origin matters. It was engineered to survive high heat, chemical exposure, salt spray, and abrasion. On wheels, which see brake dust, road salt, grit, and heat cycles every time the brakes are applied, Cerakote outperforms every other coating option.

How to Cerakote Wheels at Home

Best Cerakote Colors for Classic Wheels

Graphite Black (H-146): The modern standard. Hides brake dust, looks deep and aggressive, pairs with any body color. The default choice for restomod builds.

Burnt Bronze (H-148): Trending hard in the custom car community. Warm earth tone that references 1970s hot rod culture. Works with cream, white, or dark body colors.

Stainless (H-152): Bright silver with slight warmth. Closer to polished aluminum appearance than chrome — much more durable. Good for period-correct non-chrome builds.

OD Green (H-236): The military look. Increasingly popular on resto-custom and rat rod builds. Pairs with patina body finishes.

⚠ What NOT to Cerakote

Chrome-plated wheels: Cerakote does not bond reliably to chrome. The chrome surface lacks the mechanical anchor profile needed for adhesion. Strip the chrome first (chemical stripping or blasting to substrate) before applying Cerakote.

Anodized aluminum: Same issue — the anodize layer prevents proper bonding. Strip to base aluminum. Cerakote over anodize will peel.

Wire wheels: Cerakote on wire wheel spokes requires individual spoke blasting, which is extremely labor-intensive. For wire wheels, chrome replating or powder coat is more practical.

Safety: Load Ratings & Torque

A wheel that fails at speed kills people. This isn't a product liability disclaimer — it's physics. Understand the safety parameters before choosing or installing any wheel.

Load Ratings

Every DOT-certified wheel carries a load rating — the maximum weight each wheel is designed to support. Add up the four wheel load ratings and they must exceed your vehicle's GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating). For a 4,000-lb muscle car, each wheel must be rated at minimum 1,000 lbs. Better practice is 25-30% margin: target 1,300–1,500 lbs per wheel.

Wheel Type Typical Load Rating Suitable For
Stamped steel rallye (15×7) 1,300–1,400 lbs Street use, light track days, drag strip
Cast aluminum A356-T6 (15×7) 1,400–1,600 lbs Street, autocross, occasional track
Billet 6061-T6 (15×7) 1,600–1,800 lbs All street and track applications
Chrome wire wheel (15×6) 1,000–1,200 lbs Show and low-speed cruising only
Chrome smoothie steel (15×8) 1,200–1,350 lbs Street and show; avoid sustained highway speeds over 80 MPH with wire construction

Lug Nut Torque Reference

Under-torque = wheel comes loose. Over-torque = stretched studs, warped rotors, cracked wheel seats. Both are dangerous. Always torque in a star pattern, in two passes.

Stud Size Steel Wheel Aluminum Wheel Notes
7/16"-20 70–80 ft-lbs 65–75 ft-lbs Early GM, some Mopar A-body
1/2"-20 90–100 ft-lbs 80–90 ft-lbs Most Ford, late-model GM, most Mopar B-body
9/16"-18 100–120 ft-lbs 90–110 ft-lbs Heavy-duty trucks, C10/C20
12×1.25mm 85–95 ft-lbs 75–85 ft-lbs Metric — some performance applications

Hub-Centric vs. Lug-Centric

Hub-centric wheels have a center bore that matches your hub pilot diameter exactly. The hub locates and centers the wheel; the lug nuts clamp it in place. Hub-centric is the correct method — it prevents wheel vibration at high speeds because centering forces aren't transmitted through the tapered lug seats.

Lug-centric wheels have a center bore larger than the hub pilot. The wheel is centered solely by the taper of the lug nuts. This works at low speeds but can cause shimmy at highway speeds if lug nuts are not perfectly and evenly torqued. It's acceptable for period-correct steel rallye wheels (which were designed for this) but suboptimal for aluminum.

If your aluminum wheel's center bore is larger than your hub, use hub-centric rings — plastic or aluminum inserts that fill the gap. They're inexpensive and prevent high-speed vibration.

Classic Car Fitment Guide

The fitment data below represents stock ride height, factory suspension, and standard brake configurations. If your build has been lowered, has aftermarket disc brakes, or runs modified front end geometry, verify fitment against your specific configuration before purchasing.

'55–'57 Chevrolet

Bolt Pattern5×4.75"
Stock Size15×5 or 15×6
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×8 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace3.75"–4.25"
Period-Correct StyleSmoothie, wire, 5-spoke
Tire (stock look)P215/75R15

'64–'72 Chevelle / El Camino

Bolt Pattern5×4.75"
Stock Size14×6 or 15×6
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×8 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace4.0"–4.5"
Period-Correct StyleSteel rallye, 5-spoke cast
Tire (performance)P235/60R15 front, P245/60R15 rear

'64–'72 Pontiac GTO / Tempest

Bolt Pattern5×4.75"
Stock Size14×6
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×8 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace4.0"–4.5"
Period-Correct StyleRally II style (5-spoke cast), rallye steel
Tire (performance)P235/60R15

'65–'70 Ford Mustang

Bolt Pattern5×4.5"
Stock Size14×5 or 14×6
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×7 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace3.75"–4.25"
Period-Correct StyleSteel rallye, 5-spoke cast (Shelby look)
Tire (performance)P225/60R15

'67–'70 Dodge Charger / Coronet

Bolt Pattern5×4.5"
Stock Size14×5.5
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×8 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace4.0"–4.5"
Period-Correct StyleSteel rallye, 5-spoke cast
Tire (performance)P235/60R15 front, P245/60R15 rear

'68–'70 Plymouth Road Runner

Bolt Pattern5×4.5"
Stock Size14×5.5
Max Width (no mod)15×7 front, 15×8 rear
Offset Range0mm to +6mm
Recommended Backspace4.0"–4.5"
Period-Correct StyleSteel rallye, 5-spoke cast
Tire (drag strip)P235/60R15 street / P275/60R15 drag
Lowered Cars — Fitment Changes

When a car is lowered (coilovers, dropped spindles, lowering springs), the suspension geometry changes at full compression — and full compression means less clearance between the inner fender and the tire. A wheel that fits at stock ride height may rub at 2 inches of drop.

Rule of thumb: For every inch of drop, reduce maximum wheel width by 0.5 inches or increase backspacing by 0.25 inches. Verify by cycling the suspension with the intended wheel installed before driving.

Shop Rims & Wheels

Steel rallye wheels, chrome smoothies, wire wheels, 5-spoke cast, and billet aluminum — all sized for the builds that matter.

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