On May 11, 1947 C.E., a rubber company in Akron, Ohio, quietly changed the way cars stay on the road. The B.F. Goodrich Company announced it had developed a tire with no inner tube — a design so simple in concept, and so difficult in execution, that it would take five more years of patents and testing before the world’s automakers fully adopted it.
Key findings
- Tubeless tire: B.F. Goodrich’s design eliminated the inner tube entirely, trapping pressurized air directly within reinforced tire walls — reducing the risk of sudden blowouts that had plagued drivers since the automobile’s earliest decades.
- Road testing program: Before patents were granted, the new tires were tested at high speed, deployed on Ohio state police vehicles, and run on a fleet of taxis — a real-world trial that gave engineers confidence the design would hold under everyday conditions.
- Industry adoption: By 1955 C.E., tubeless tires came standard on most new American automobiles, with independent experts projecting at least 25 percent more tire mileage and near elimination of dangerous blowouts.
Three years in the making
The announcement in 1947 C.E. was the culmination of more than three years of engineering work. The core problem Goodrich engineers solved was elegant: if you reinforce the tire wall enough to hold air pressure on its own, you no longer need a separate inner tube acting as a pressurized bladder inside the rubber.
Inner tubes had been a feature of pneumatic tires since the 1890s C.E. They worked — but they came with a persistent weakness. A puncture meant a rapid loss of pressure, and a fast blowout at highway speed could be deadly. The inner tube’s failure mode was sudden and unforgiving.
Goodrich’s tubeless design changed that failure mode. A puncture in a tubeless tire caused air to escape slowly rather than explosively, giving drivers time to respond. The company claimed the new design also offered superior air retention, better resistance to bruising from road hazards, and an easier ride. The New York Times reported in December 1954 C.E. that drivers of 1955 model cars could expect “almost no blowouts” — a remarkable promise for an era when tire failures were a routine danger of long-distance travel.
From patent office to every driveway
The path from announcement to mass adoption was not immediate. Goodrich spent the years between 1947 C.E. and 1952 C.E. awaiting patent approval while the tires were tested in service. The patents, when they finally came, covered the tire’s multiple innovations separately — a sign of how technically layered the design actually was.
Once the industry moved, it moved fast. Howard N. Hawkes, vice president of the United States Rubber Company, called the shift to tubeless tires “one of the most far-reaching changes ever to take place in the tire industry.” Within three years of the patents being granted, the tubeless tire was standard equipment on new cars across the country.
The story didn’t end there. Later in the 1950s C.E., Michelin introduced the radial-ply tire — a tubeless design with walls made from alternating layers of tough rubber cord. That innovation built directly on the tubeless foundation Goodrich had laid, and radial tires are now the global standard for automobiles in virtually every country.
Lasting impact
The tubeless tire is one of those innovations that succeeded so completely it became invisible. Modern drivers rarely think about tire blowouts as a serious road hazard — in part because tubeless technology made catastrophic sudden failures far rarer.
The safety gains were real and measurable. A slower, controlled pressure loss gives a driver time to steer, brake, and pull over. A sudden blowout at 60 miles per hour offers no such window. By changing the failure mode of the tire, Goodrich engineers changed the survival odds in thousands of roadside emergencies that never made any headline.
The tubeless tire also made long-distance driving more practical and economical. Greater mileage per tire, fewer roadside stops, and reduced maintenance costs added up over millions of vehicles. The design enabled the expansion of highway culture in the postwar United States — and contributed to the broader global spread of automobile travel through the second half of the 20th century C.E.
Michelin’s radial-ply successor, introduced later in the decade, extended those gains further. The radial’s construction — alternating plies of rubber cord running perpendicular to the direction of travel — reduced rolling resistance, improved fuel efficiency, and extended tire life. None of it would have been possible without first eliminating the inner tube.
Blindspots and limits
The tubeless tire made cars safer, but safer cars also made high-speed driving feel more routine — and the postwar expansion of automobile infrastructure came with well-documented costs: air pollution, urban sprawl, and the displacement of communities, particularly Black and working-class neighborhoods, to make way for highway construction. The tire was a genuine innovation; the system it served was more complicated. It’s also worth noting that Goodrich’s story is the one that reached the patent office and the press — rubber workers on the factory floor whose labor made the three-year engineering program possible remain unnamed in the historical record.
Read more
For more on this story, see: History.com — B.F. Goodrich Co. announces development of tubeless tire
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- The Good News for Humankind archive on technology
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