Maybe, this is what happened to the wheels and tires? During the late 1970's and through the 80's, we ran out of tailwheel tires for our B-17 air tankers. New ones could be special ordered from Goodyear, but the cost for setting up the molds and making batches of less than several hundred were prohibitive. Aero Union came up with an STC to substitue the mainmount (wheel and tire) from F11F's in place of the original tire. While better than nothing, there was no give to the sidewall in these tires and with any wieght on the tailwheel in a crosswind, the tailwheel lock would pop loose after a couple of good sideloads and the tire would turn 90 degrees and leave all of the tread in a long zipper looking wear pattern on the runway. Chuck Ott and I managed to destroy one just taxi-ing with a gusty crosswind at Alamogordo before we could get stopped. So, we carried a couple of spares and a jack in the airplane at all times.
Here's one spare in the back of Evergreen's Tanker 22 at Alamogordo in 1983.

This picture from Sledge 39 gives a good view of how narrow that tailwheel tire was. The recommended tire pressure was 150 psi, which didn't help with flexing what little sidewall there was in the tire.
