and unimpaired. The maximum speed of this car was 25 miles an hour; experience is wanting as to what results would follow the use of these tyres on a high-powered vehicle, both as regards wear on the tread and the strength of the attachment.
The Goodyear.—Bolts are also employed, but in a different way, in the Goodyear (fig. 16), a tyre of American origin. They are passed horizontally, to the number of sixteen, through
The New York.—Another American tyre is the New York (fig. 17). Unlike the foregoing it is of the single tube variety. It is made in light and heavy patterns, the one illustrated being intended for cars weighing over a ton. Owing to the uniform thickness of the walls the tyre can be ridden deflated without material damage. It is fastened to the rim both by vertical and horizontal bolts.