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  1. The spinner on automobile wheels historically refers to knock-off hub nuts or center caps. They may be the actual, or intended to simulate, the design used on antique vehicles or vintage sports cars.

  2. Drop-top Nissan Juke, with the mirrors a different color than the body, and, you guessed it, spinners. This guy had to have been making a conscious decision to make the ugliest/tackiest vehicle known to man.

  3. The suicide knob (also known as a spinner, Brodie, or necker) is a free-turning ball that’s attached to a steering wheel. Originally designed as an aid to drivers of heavy trucks and other vehicles lacking power steering, the utilitarian devices were embraced in the 1950s by American hot rodders and car enthusiasts, who thought they looked cool.

  4. 16 gru 2015 · The 1950 front wasn’t much better, with a “nose” one assumes was to look like an aircraft with a “spinner” grille that looked like it had been removed from the nacelle of a B-29. The “spinner” was dropped for the 1952 model year.

  5. 25 sie 2021 · Whether you've got a street rod, muscle car, or a sport truck, slotted mag wheels work on nearly every vintage hot rod as their deep-dish design works especially well with older cars that have ...

  6. 18 maj 2024 · If you are shopping for “spinner wheel covers” don’t get them confused with old sports car rims (think 1960s and earlier) that have a single “mono lug” in the center, often called a “spinner.”

  7. 29 sty 2012 · Usually installed on large SUVs or massively tuned cars, spinners are nothing more than eye-catching accessories supposed to add a touch of style to any ride out there.

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