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All Billet Specialties wheels are two piece, the centers are machined and welded into a hoop. That allows for a wide range of backspacing available and typically covers anything that a typical protouring car would need. 2 piece wheels are typically lighter than a similar sized 3 piece. 2 piece wheels can be rehooped as well if you were to ever bend one. It is not field serviceable like a 3 piece but it can be done.
Where the 3 piece wheel really shines is the ability to do half inch sizes, you are not married to an off the shelf hoop. Also the ability to do different finishes on the center, inner, and outer hoops can make for some cool finishes. |
PM me with what your looking at and will shoot you some pricing.
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I have a set of Billet Specialties Stiletto wheels on my 67 Camaro. It is a great wheel except for the excessive weld splatter on the back hoop areas. Makes it very difficult to polish. The splatter is visible when viewing the open areas between the spokes. I talked with Billet Specialties about the issue at a Goodguys event and they were not at all concerned. You might see if they have an option to clean the splatter and re-polish the back after welding. I would not purchase these wheels again without some quality control in this area.
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Billet Specialties wheels
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That sounds like a **** deal to me, yalls wheels aint cheap to begin with. So for an extra $50 per wheel you can also get em without weld splatter? Hell i was gonna with y'alls wheels over forgelines. |
I have Boze Forged on my '68 Camaro. They were built to my specs so they were not cheap, but a decent price for custom wheels. Forgeline's were my first choice but the pricetag was waaaaaay too far out of reach. I am sure you will be satisfied with any of the top brands and I couldn't be more happy with the Boze I went with for the quality, design and price. Good luck
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Wow!! "Either pay us $50 per wheel extra to polish your inner hoops or we will not take off the weld splatter for the high price you've already paid. Oh, by the way...thanks for patronizing our business and choosing Billet Specialty Wheels. We realize you had a choice amid the plethora of wheel choices available on the market. So, with that in mind, we give you wheels with weld splatter because it's too much of a hassle for us to take off." I highly doubt Billet Specialties forewarn you about this before you spend a few thousand dollars and up on wheels. I've seen many Centerline, Intro, Boze and Budnik brand wheels and they didn't have weld splatter on their 2 piece wheels. I'm sure they did when they were built, but those companies cared enough to remove it. That's the difference. I think we all understand and are fully aware of the how and why the weld splatter is there. The key is the customer service that goes along with the sale. What a way to enter into the muti-piece wheel market Billet Specialties. That's a :guns: ripoff if you ask me.
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If every member on this board snapped a picture of the backside of their two piece wheels, you could count on one hand how many are finished on the backside as good as the front side. |
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