Kumho Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Once known as Samyang Tire, Kumho is headquartered in Gwangju. The name of the company means bright lake in the Korean language, and the company, as well as Asiana Airlines, is a subsidiary of the Kumho Asiana Group. The company has been around since September 1960, and began making only about twenty tires a day. Heavy reliance on manual labor was used, and there was a shortage of technology and facilities to increase production. However, this situation was not to last. (Read more about Kumho Tires below...)
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More background about Kumho Tires
In the later part of the 1960s, the company acquired the KS Mark, and shipped out of the country to East Asia for the first time. This was the time when Kumho/Samyang Tire really got started. This first shipment of 200 tires started a period of growth. By 1969, the company had acquired a mark from the US DOT (Department of Transportation) and snow tires were developed shortly afterward.
The period at the end of the 1960s was one where the Korean government was focusing on national reconstruction, setting business objectives for Samyang Tire and many other companies as well. The company poured a great deal of energy into building the present Kwanju Plant, then called the Songjung Plant. Ties were established with the US company Uniroyal, and Kumho entered the world market. On the tenth Korea Export Day, the company received the Stone Trophy, and two years later in 1975, the Silver Trophy.
Despite difficulties in getting raw materials, as well as the mid 1970s oil shock, Kumho still managed to grow impressively. They became a leader in the tire sector and were listed in the Korea Stock Exchange by 1976. In this year, the company also tested its first aircraft tire and received the Korea Export Day Gold Trophy for producing a million tires in a year, then a record in Korea. Another plant was added in 1977, and the company received the Korea Quality Control Award grand prize two years later. The first radial tire was developed in 1978. Public image was strong for the company at this time.
Unfortunately, democratization in the 1980s and political instability in Korea caused problems, with many struggles between labor and management. Eventually all problems were straightened out, however. Ground was broken for the new Koksung plant and total output in 1980 exceeded twenty million tires. A unique colored tire for passenger cars was developed in 1982. In 1983, the first facility overseas was founded for Kumho. The Samyang/Kumho Tire merger occurred in 1984, a year in which the company also won the productivity Grand Prize.
By August 1992, the company was ranked among the top ten in the world tire market, and the next year, its tires participated in the Paris to Dakar Rally. The first ZR grade tire was developed that year, as well as the high end Xelex model. Currently, the company operates three manufacturing facilities in South Korea, as well as three in China, exporting tires from these locations around the world. Kumho also has three centers for R&D, located in South Korea, the US and the UK. As of 2008, the company has begun construction of a new manufacturing facility in Georgia, hoping to produce over two million tires annually.
Tags: car tires, kumho tires, suv tires, Tires, truck tiresGoodyear Tires for Sale, Eagle, Wrangler, Frontera
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Goodyear Tire and Rubber was founced by Frank Seiberling in 1898, and went on to become the third largest tire company in the world, with only Bridgestone and Michelin leading. Goodyear currently makes tires for cars and light trucks, commercial trucks, race cars, airplanes and construction machines. Many people are now familiar with the company's famous blimp, which first flew in 1925. The company was named for Charles Goodyear, inventor of vulcanized rubber, but the company was not otherwise associated with him or his family. (Continue reading below about Goodyear Tires...)
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Goodyear Tires - A Leader For More Than A Century
The early Goodyear tires were popular due to their low maintenance properties and the ease with which they could be detached. The original plant had thirteen employees, making rubber pads for horseshoes, poker chips, and tires for carriages and bicycles. Once the automobile became popular, Goodyear moved to making tires for it as well, and grew significantly.
The 1908 Model T used Goodyear tires, and the first aircraft tire was made by this company in 1909. By 1926, Goodyear had become the world's largest rubber company and by 1985, sales worldwide were greater than ten billion dollars.
Currently Goodyear operates twenty-three manufacturing facilities in North America, including ten tire plants, a plant for making steel wire for tires, four chemical plants, a tire mold plant, three tire retread facilities, two aviation retread plants, and two mix plants, as well as a hose producer in the US. Aggregate floor space of these facilities is nearly twenty-four million square feet.
In addition to the North American facilities, the Goodyear company also owns and operates a number of manufacturing locations in five European countries, including fourteen tire plants and facilities for making tire wire, molds and tire making machines, an aviation retread plant and a mix plant, all with aggregate floor space at about thirteen and a half million square feet.
Other plants exist in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Pacific Islands. Goodyear also operates three research and development facilities and three proving grounds for their tires, plus nearly two thousand retail outlets. Unlike many competitors, the company has not had a major restructuring since 1991.
In 2008, Goodyear Tire and Rubber was recognized as one of the most respected companies in the US by Forbes Magazine and the Reputation Institute, ranking sixteenth in the listing. This list is based on consumer opinion. Goodyear's 2008 score was significantly higher than the previous year, and this company is the only tire producer in the top seventy-five.
Tags: car tires, goodyear tires, goodyear wranglers, suv tires, Tires, truck tires, Winter TiresMichelin Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Michelin is the second largest tire manufacturer in the world, also famous for road maps, travel guides, and restaurant awards. The company is headquartered in Clermont-Ferrand, about four hundred kilometers south of Paris. Only Bridgestone ranks ahead of Michelin in the global market.
The company started with two brothers, who ran a rubber factory in Clermont-Ferrand. One day they repaired a tire for a cyclist, but this tire was glued to the rim, requiring a great deal of time and effort for repair. The brothers quickly set out to create their own version, which didn't have to be glued to the rim. This resulted in an effective, easily changed tire and began the company's long, successful history. (Read more about Michelin Tires below...)
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A Leader In Tires - Michelin
You'll probably recognize the Michelin company symbol - Bibendum or the Michelin Man. It's one of the oldest trademarks in the world, and was drawn in 1898 after Edouard Michelin noticed that a stacked tire display looked like a man.
Today, this is one of the most recognized trademarks there is, representing the Michelin company in over a hundred fifty countries. The original poster showed him toasting his competitors, and implied that their products were weaker and not up the the trials of the road.
However, the logo has changed over the years. The original version was a cigar smoking man made from bicycle tires and wearing pince nez glasses. Over the years, the Michelin Man has given up smoking, taken up running, and recently slimmed down to reflect the slimmer, lower profile tires on most automobiles.
He even has a Michelin tire puppy in some American TV ads. He has also shown up as a chariot wheel dealer in several translations of Asterix. A major sustainable mobility event held every year is called the Michelin Challenge Bibendum.
Michelin maps are known for their use by Allied forces to plan the invasion of Normandy in World War II, and the son of Andre Michelin was an early member of the French Resistance during this war. Michelin is responsible for innovating the radial tire as early as the 1940s for the Citroen, which they then owned.
The company has only been managed by a non-member of the family since 2006, when the previous manager drowned in a fishing accident. However, under the current leadership, the company continues to make great tires. They're the original equipment manufacturer for Mark II vehicles from Volvo, as well as GM, Volkswagen, and many other marques. Micheline also owns B. F. Goodrich, a long standing American tire company, as well as Uniroyal USA.
Tags: car tires, michelin tires, suv tires, Tires, truck tires, Winter TiresPirelli Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
This company was founded in Milan in 1872 by Giovanni Battista Pirelli, and initially specialized in rubber. Currently Pirelli focuses on tire and cable production, though the cable division was recently sold to Goldman Sachs. Pirelli is also known for the Pirelli Tower, a famous skyscraper in Milan, built by Alberto Pirelli in the 1950s in the same area that housed the first Pirelli factory. (Find more information about Pirelli below...)
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Pirelli Tires - An Italian Great
The company is also known for the famous Pirelli calendar, published each year and featuring famous models and actresses, as well as the work of some of the world's great fashion photographers. The Pirelli International Award is also given for international multimedia each year, for the best communication of Science and Technology conducted entirely online. The company's slogan is "Power is nothing without control" and has been featured in a number of print and TV ads.
Pirelli is responsible for the invention of the wide radial tire for racing. In the 1970s, a request from the Lancia rally racing team for a strong tire that could deal with the new Lancia Stratos's power resulted in this new tire. Racing tires at this time were usually either very wide slick tires made using a cross ply method, or ordinary narrow radials, which offered insufficient grip.
A wide tire with reduced height in the sidewalls was created, offering the strength of the radial structure and the grip of the slicks. The tires were also used with the Porsche 911 Turbo at the same time, and are now the standard in sport cars and racing cars all over the world. Since 2007, Pirelli tires are being used as the control for a number of Championship competitions.
Pirelli sponsors the Italian football club Internazionale, the Uraguayan club Penarol, the Argentinian club Velez, and the Maltese club Valleta. Factories are located in many different locations, including in England. Pirelli remains among the best tire manufacturers in the world, especially for race cars and bikes, and is the only allowed tire in a number of race championships.
The fifth largest manufacturer in the world market, this long standing tire maker prizes quality and performance and has for a long time. Some of the earliest autos in the world were on the road using Pirelli tires, and the company's first race victory came in 1907. The company has been making great racing tires ever since. Pirelli's revenues in recent years have topped three and a half billion Euros annually, and the company keeps on growing.
Tags: car tires, pirelli tires, suv tires, Tires, truck tires, Winter TiresContinental Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
All About Continental Tires: Continental is a leading maker of tires, vehicle stability systems, brake systems, engine injection systems, tachographs, and all kinds of other parts for the transport and auto industries. It's based in Hanover, German, and is the fourth largest maker of tires in the world, with Bridgestone, Michelin and Goodyear on the list ahead of it.
Founded in 1871 as a maker of rubber, this company became one of the top automotive suppliers in the world. There are six divisions in the modern Continental company - Chassis and Safety, Commercial Vehicle Tires, ContiTech, Interior, Passenger and Light Truck Tires and Powertrain. This innovative tire and auto parts and systems company has been around for more than a hundred and twenty-five years and is still going strong. (Please continue reading below...)
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More about Continental Tires from a very versatile automotive company
The company has been focusing on reducing the consumption of fuel in vehicles of all kinds. This is done using new, more efficient systems for fuel injection, hybrid systems, and fuel saving tires. The difference a tire can make in fuel efficiency is bigger than you might think.
Around the world, tires are sold under the Continental brand, with regional brands like Barum, Euzkadi, and General available as well. Almost all major producers of trucks, buses and automobiles buy from Continental, with such customers as Porsche, Volkswagen, BMW, Toyota, Honda, Volvo, Ford and others. As of August 2008, Continental has been taken over by the Schaeffler group, and is valued at twelve billion Euros. The group has restricted its stake int he company to less than fifty percent for four years, however, and is trying to preserve Continental's independence.
Continental Tire has been in the industry in North America for a comparatively short time - only since the 1980s. In 1987, it purchased general tire, following other manufacturers into the US market. The company's North American headquarters are relocating into South Carolina in 2009. Recent cuts in retiree health care and tire production have been worrying to some, but business for Continental continues to be strong, with people all over the world using their tires on their vehicles.
Continental is also working with GM to create the battery pack for the upcoming Chevy Volt. This extended range electric vehicle may be the first major plug in car in the US. Continental is one of only two teams still in the GM competition, and are the primary contractor for a Lithium-ion battery system. Continental and GM may be the companies that bring us a whole new revolution in the way we work and drive.
Tags: car tires, continental tires, suv tires, Tires, truck tiresDunlop Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Dunlop Tires made tires and rubber products for all kinds of industries for the majority of the twentieth century, being taken over by BTR plc in the mid 1980s. Founded in 1889, the Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd was created to commercialize John Dunlop's pneumatic tire patent. The company originally provided tires during the bicycle boom, and started out subcontracting manufacture. By 1902, the company had a manufacturing subsidiary of its own, located in Birmingham, England. (Continue reading more about Dunlop Tires...)
Here, you can shop for the right Dunlop Tire for your vehicle:
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Dunlop is Worldwide
Branches were established in North America, Australia, and Europe by the 1890s, but financial problems required the company to sell overseas operations shortly thereafter. Because of this, Dunlop tires sold in New Zealand and Australia have been owned separately from those elsewhere in the world for more than a century.
Production of automobile tires didn't start until the beginning of the twentieth century. The company considered to expand, opening a new plant in 1918. By 1920, sales branches and subsidiaries had opened up elsewhere in the world again, located in places as varied as Belgium, Denmark, India, Italy, the Netherlands, South Africa, South America, Spain and Sweden. The company owned rubber plantations in Ceylon and Malaya and had manufacturing operations in the US, Japan, and France.
Foreign companies started competing heavily in the UK market in the 1920s, so Dunlop diversified to hold its position, adding clothing and footwear to its offerings. An aerospace division was created to supply tires and rubber for the fledgling aircraft industry, and foam latex mattresses were produced from 1929 onward. Sporting equipment was even made by Dunlop from the 1930s.
After World War II, the market for tires in the UK was biased towards sellers, and Dunlop took advantage of it, holding nearly half the market by the mid 1950s. The market share declined because of allegations of price fixing, however. In addition, the company's choice in the 1960s to work with textile radials instead of steel belted radials caused Dunlop to lose ground to Michelin and others marketing the more durable types of tires. However, the company stayed active, and was a major supplier of Formula One tires from 1950 to 1977.
As part of a merger with Pirelli in 1971, the third largest tire company in the world was created. However, this merger didn't work out, so the joint venture was dissolved in 1981. During this period, Dunlop did create the first failsafe tires in the world, which allowed safe movement of a vehicle, even after a blowout had occurred.
By the 1980s, however, the company had serious financial difficulties. Dunlop Tire Corporation in the US was sold to its management, and many other companies were sold as well. Currently, tires with the Dunlop name are still made by the company, but that company is owned by Sumitomo Rubber Industries and Goodyear Tire and Rubber.
Tags: car tires, dunlop tires, suv tires, Tires, truck tiresBridgestone Tires for Sale, Dueler, Blizzak, Turanza, Potenza
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Bridgestone Tires - A Multinational Winner: You may not know it, but Bridgestone Tires was originally founded in Japan. The company's name comes from that of the founder - Shojiro Ishibashi. Ishibashi means "stone bridge" in Japanese, and a transposition of that phrase was used for the English version of the company's name. Currently Bridgestone is number one in the global tire market, ahead of Michelin, Goodyear and Continental. (Continue reading more about Bridgestone below...)
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Continue Reading background about Bridgestone Tires
The company has more than a hundred and forty production facilities, located in twenty-four countries. Corporate policies from 2001 have led to this level of globalization for Bridgestone. The company was established in 1931, and operated in Kurume, Japan. The goal was to make tires using only Japanese technology, with no reliance on tech from North America or Europe. This meant there were many early difficulties in sales, production and technology. However, as improvements in quality and manufacturing occurred, the company rapidly expanded in both their domestic markets and those overseas.
Of course, like most Japanese companies, Bridgestone experienced difficulties during World War II, when wartime regulations affected every segment of Japanese life, including tire production. Almost all the company's output went to the military. During an aerial bombing raid, the headquarters in Tokyo was destroyed. All overseas assets for Bridgestone were also lost. However, the Yokohama and Kurume plants remained untouched, and were able to go back into production right away. Despite a forty-five day worker strike, the company was able to keep on making great tires.
Bridgestone was the first Japanese company to start selling rayon cord tires in 1951, and began selling nylon tires in 1959. They opened several new plants in that time to deal with the quickly expanding market for motorization. The company was first listed on the stock exchange at the beginning of the 1960s, and adopted over all quality control plans at this time. In 1965, the company opened its first overseas plant since the end of World War II, in Singapore. Expansion of production to Thailand occurred in 1969. The first radial tire from Bridgestone came out in 1967, the same year that Bridgestone America was established, and was called the RD10.
In the late 1970s, the company met the beginning of Japan's economic stagnation period with an emphasis on establishing its own radial tire technology. More domestic plants were built and new tires came on the market, including the Super Filler Radial in 1978 and the POTENZA radial in 1979. Production started up in other countries during this decade, too, including Indonesia, Iran, Taiwan and Australia.
The company celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1981, and its seventy-fifth in 2006. By the mid 1980s, Bridgestone had established production facilities in countries all over the world, and changed its name to Bridgestone Corporation. It also purchased the Firestone company in 1988, and put a great deal of resources into rebuilding this ailing company. In 1990, the two companies were amalgamated. Currently, Bridgestone produces great tires for just about any vehicle you can imagine, from cars and trucks to motorcycles, buses and construction vehicles, and even airplanes. And, while they're not the cheapest tires, they're among the very best tires on the market today.
Tags: all season tires, blizzak, bridgestone tires, car tires, dueler, potenza, suv tires, Tires, truck tires, turanza, Winter TiresBFGoodrich Tires for Sale, G-Force, Traction, Mud Terrain
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
Here's some interesting background about this renowned tire brand. B. F. Goodrich was founded in 1870. Then called Goodrich, Tew & Co, it gained the name we know it best by in 1880, after its founder, Benjamin Franklin Goodrich. In the 1980s, the company was called BFGoodrich, and it's been the Goodrich Corporation since 2001.
Innovation has been important throughout the history of the company. It was one of the largest tire makers in the world. However, even though there are still B. F. Goodrich tires, they're no longer made by the Goodrich Corporation. Any tires you buy with this company's name on them are actually made by Michelin. (Continue reading below...)
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More about BF Goodrich Tires
B. F. Goodrich was always a pioneer, with the first research lab for rubber set up in 1895 by the son of the company's founder. In the first twenty years they were in operation, they became a pioneer in the rubber field, and kept on innovating afterward. B. F. Goodrich supplied tires to some of the earliest aircraft, in both civilian and military uses. They also provided electrical equipment and parts for some planes, including the 1919 Vickers Vimy, the first plane to fly nonstop across the Atlantic.
The company continued to provide tires and components for aircraft, and innovated some of the unique functions of early planes. They also created the first pressure suit for pilots, allowing humans to fly at thirty thousand feet or more for the very first time. During WWII, B. F. Goodrich and subsidiaries played a big role in rearming the Allies for combat.
For much of the early part of the twentieth century, rubber came from natural sources - inexpensive plantations in southeast Asia. However, relying on foreign sources was risky. If the price rose, companies would be in trouble. That's why B. F. Goodrich was one of the first companies to switch to synthetic rubber. It cost more at first, but when supplies from rubber plantations grew unreliable due to Japanese blockades, this company was able to keep producing when others couldn't.
They've gone on to be aerospace leaders throughout the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. The company supplied tires for all kinds of vehicles up through the late 1980s, and tires made under its name are still available and still carry the kind of quality that's associated with B. F. Goodrich. They made the first tubeless tire in the mid-1940s, making automobile tires easier to use for drivers everywhere. They're probably best known for the BF Goodrich Radial T/A tires - once the top of the line when it came to automobile tires.
Today, tires under the B. F. Goodrich name are just as good as they've always been. You can find tires for multiple uses, from passenger tires that'll last a long time to off road tires and racing tires, too. If you're looking for a great tire with a long history of quality production and innovation, B. F. Goodrich is the place to go.
Tags: bfgoodrich tires, car tires, michelin, suv tires, Tires, truck tiresFirestone Tires for Sale
February 12, 2009 by Robert · Leave a Comment
First founded by Harvey Firestone in 1900, the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company supplied pneumatic tires for almost any form of wheeled transport common then, from buggies to wagons. However, the immense potential for automobile tires was soon obvious, and Firestone pioneered tire mass production. Because of their ability to produce tires effectively and efficiently, Firestone was the original supplier for cars and trucks from Ford, including the 1906 Model T, and also offered replacement parts for these vehicles. (Read more about Firestone Tires below...)
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More About the Firestone Tire Saga
Firestone was based originally in Akron, which was also the location of Goodyear - the company's major business rival. For more than three quarters of a century, the two companies were the biggest suppliers of tires for vehicles in North America. The company expanded to Canada in 1919, producing the first tire made in that country in September of 1922.
The Oldfield tire, named after a famous racer, was popular in the 1920s. Between 1928 and 1979, the Art Deco factory in Brentford, England, was also operational. During the late twenties, the Voice of Firestone was a popular sponsored radio show, eventually transferred to television in 1949 and broadcasting until 1963.
It wasn't all just about tires, though. Firestone received a defense contract in 1951 for the MGM-5 Corporal missile, called the embryo of the army. This surface to surface guided missile was designed to deliver an explosive warhead over a distance of up to seventy-five nautical miles, or about a hundred thirty-nine kilometers. It could even carry a nuclear payload, and many were produced. However, by 1962, the missile had been replaced by the MGM-29 Sergeant.
By the late 1970s, Firestone was having difficulties in the financial arena, and restructured significantly, closing many plants and moving the company. Problems with the Firestone 500 radial - the company's first radial tire - may have added to these troubles. The versions of this radial produced in the 1970s showed tread separation at high speeds, possibly due to bonding cement failure and corrosion of the internal steel. Strict quality control measures helped, but didn't completely fix the problems, and four hundred thousand tires produced in Decatur, Illinois were recalled in 1977, with another seven million recalled in 1978.
Diversification and deliberate actions to boost stock price helped improve the situation. In 1988, the company was sold to Bridgestone, another major tire producer based in Japan. Currently, the companies' combined operations work out of Nashville, Tennessee and are still producing tires. Bridgestone is one of the largest suppliers of tires in the world, and by extension, so is Firestone.
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