PRI 2025: Race Star 15×13 Beadliner Wheel Could Change Small Tire Racing

Scott Parker
December 12, 2025

At the 2025 PRI Show, one of the biggest topics making waves in the drag racing world is the release of beadliner wheels for small-tire racing. If you caught the Snowbird Outlaw Nationals last week, then you already know how hot the True 10.5 N/T class is—speculation is that these cars are running high 3s in the eighth mile on a 28×10.5-inch slick.

Beadliner wheels first appeared in the Pro Mod world a few years ago. In fact, we spotted a video from Stevie Jackson in 2018 talking about using them on Shadow. When radial racing really took off, it sparked innovation in the slick-tire world, blending knowledge from both sides for a “best-of-both-worlds” setup: the forgiveness of a slick with the stability of a radial. However, until recently, beadliners were only available in 16-inch sizes for big-tire cars. This year, Race Star set out to change that.

“Race Star is known for its 16×18 beadliner that we came out with in 2023, and we’ve done really well with it. We looked at the 28×10.5 racing, which is basically a Pro Mod car on a small tire,” said L.B. Davis of Race Star. “We decided that we needed to try to come out with a 15-inch wheel that could handle a liner wheel and tire setup.”

Race Star worked with Hoosier to develop a 15×13-inch beadliner wheel combination for 28×10.5 slicks. “Hoosier was making a liner tire for the ARCA Series, and we used their ARCA Series liner along with a 28×10.5 drag-race slick for the outside. It mounts up fantastic. In 10 minutes, you can have this liner and tire setup mounted on the wheel,” Davis said proudly.

“When you put a liner wheel/tire setup on, you’re adding weight to the car. A conventional tire is going to weigh 10–11 pounds less than this. So you need a car that has enough horsepower to pull that wheel out of the hole. And what the wheel does, the way it’s made, you’re no longer pulling an H-shaped tire out of the hole. With the liner setup, you’re pulling a perfectly round circle, which delivers power to the ground smoother and quicker. You should have more control of the car and more mile-per-hour at the end of the run.”

If you didn’t know, a liner is much different from a tube. A liner is essentially a secondary tire inside the tire. It has been used in NASCAR for over a decade, and the technology dates back to the original run-flat tire developed in 1966.

Seeing this kind of technology transfer is exciting, but the real question remains—will it be allowed? Does it defeat the purpose of having a small-tire slick class if you can gain an edge that overcomes the tire’s inherent limitations?