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<title>Phil Sollecito's Articles</title>
<link>http://www.articlealley.com</link>
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<webMaster>editorial@articlealley.com</webMaster>
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<title>How to Keep Hubcaps from Falling Off</title>
<description>Hubcaps should mount firmly onto your rims, with full contact all around the perimeter of the steel wheel. You should be able to remove them with your bare hands with great difficulty, or not at all. This is the case with over 99% of standard wheels. Howe...</description>
<link>http://www.articlealley.com/article_120840_31.html</link>
<pubDate>17th January 2007</pubDate>
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<title>Wheelskins: Chrome for Styled Wheels</title>
<description>"Wheelskin" is a relatively new term. Wheelskins were invented in the late 1990s to provide an inexpensive way to put chrome on styled wheels. 

If you would like to read this article with pictures of classic cars that illustrate the examples given, go ...</description>
<link>http://www.articlealley.com/article_16630_31.html</link>
<pubDate>22nd November 2005</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Modern Materials in Hubcaps and Wheel covers</title>
<description>Our father's and grandfathers' wheel covers were gleaming orbs of chrome plated steel, glittering wire spoke patterns, or flat chrome Frisbee look-alikes. Before 1980, chrome plated steel was the only material light and strong enough to do the job. Unfort...</description>
<link>http://www.articlealley.com/article_14125_31.html</link>
<pubDate>02nd November 2005</pubDate>
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<title>Hubcaps or Wheel covers, What's in a name?</title>
<description>Cars and trucks built before about 1935 came on wire spoke wheels with small metal caps installed to seal the wheel hub on the axle. Those early "HUBcaps" were smaller than 3" in diameter, made of heavy gauge plated steel hammered onto the hub of the whee...</description>
<link>http://www.articlealley.com/article_13500_31.html</link>
<pubDate>27th October 2005</pubDate>
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