18's overall diameter stays at around 29 inches.
plenty of tall 16's around
235 x 85 x 16
I think?
hi all,
have a standard D2 with 16 inch alloy wheels (std) and thinking of going to 18 inch wheels, with this automatically give me an increase of 2 inches in height or do the 18 inch wheels have lower profile tyres making it pretty much same as 16 inch standards. dont really want the 18 inch wheels but thinking of options to get another 2 inches of height. Or could you just get a higher profile 16 inch tyre which would match the height of a 18 inch anyway. thx![]()
18's overall diameter stays at around 29 inches.
plenty of tall 16's around
235 x 85 x 16
I think?
"How long since you've visited The Good Oil?"
'93 V8 Rossi
'97 to '07. sold.![]()
'01 V8 D2
'06 to 10. written off.
'03 4.6 V8 HSE D2a with Tornado ECM
'10 to '21
'16.5 RRS SDV8
'21 to Infinity and Beyond!
1988 Isuzu Bus. V10 15L NA Diesel
Home is where you park it..
[IMG][/IMG]
The big deal with big wheels is to allow the fitment of big brakes (generally), and lower profile tyres designed for on road performance rather than off road scabbling.
The overall wheel & tyre diameter remains the same.
This allows the final gearing and ultimately the speedo readings to be accurate across the range.
You could fit larger profile tyres to those recommended for each wheel size, however, your speed reading will be completetly disfunctional.
This: Tire size calculator will allow you to play with various wheel and tyre options and will indicate the % difference in speedo accuracy.
Not sure how much height if any you will gain by putting 18s on, but it will mean you will generally run lower profile tyres which will cost you heaps more, your ride comfort will go out of window and it will probably be useless offroad.
The easier and much better way to gain a bit of height would be... umm.. fit bigger tyres?
If you still want to go down that path I'm sure any of the HSE owners here that have 18's will swap for your 16's for free, no questions asked.
Personally, I'd rather have 18's for onroad use.
They are a much more stable and better handling tyre and the tread face is wider than a normal 255 tyre. With the pressures run on the road I doubt there is a lot of difference in the ride.
Cheers
Slunnie
~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~
I'd have to disagree Slunnie. Before I bought my 2000 D2 I took a 2001 D2 for a spin (classic town edition) with 18's and it tram-tracked everywhere. Every bump in the road transfered through the steering and the car wanted to follow cracks in the road. Took the 2000 D2 for a spin straight after and no such problem. I checked the tyre pressure on the 2001 but it was spot on. It had just been over the pits too so no obvious wear in steering etc to cause the tracking. My landy mechanic at the time said a lot of people dont like the 18's because of the tram tracking issue so I dont think it was isolated to that one car.
In regards to more height shamirj, what are you chasing? More clearance under the diffs for offroading or wanting to fill the wheel arches a bit more? As the others have said, 18's with low profiles are the same height as 16's with 235-70's (although a bit wider)
The more rubber you have, the more cushioning effect off road (on rutted roads), hence why I have gone the 235/85 size in an all terrain type tyre. The one downside is that they have a much taller side wall than standard which means the tyre moves around a bit more under the car during on road driving. Standard it was better on the road but the bigger tyres transform it off road.![]()
Thats an interesting issue and I think that its not necessarily an 18" wheel issue. I've found the 16x8 rims and OE tyres do that also and it's quite noticable. I'm not sure if it has to do with the tyres perhaps although they are also different tyres fitted to the 18x8 and the 16x8's.
Cheers
Slunnie
~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~
You are probably right slunnie. Having only driven one D2 with 18's I'm no expert. Be interesting to hear if others have had problems with 18's or 16's tram tracking as it might be possible to narrow it down to specific tyre companies. I have sinced changed mechanics from the one that told me about the issue with 18's because I found out they were dodgy as![]()
Sent from my iPhone using telepathy....
My 03 D2a has the 18's with 255/55R18's as per original spec and it was terrible when I first got it - tram tracking all over the place. The front wheel toe had been checked and set at, I think, zero degrees. After insisting, the wheel place gave it a tiny amount of toe in (can't remember if that's +'ve or -'ve) - the front of the wheels are closer than the back. Fixed it right up - drives beautifully now.
The ride isn't great when compared with 16" wheeled vehicles but it does go around corners nicely (with ACE too) and I've found no issues off roading, including sand; I do wince a bit in really rocky terrain though and take it a little easier. On sand, I tend not to air down as much as with higher profile tyres but will go to about 15psi at stockton and it goes really well.
Considered changing to 16's but decided that a little ride harshness is a trade off I'm happy with for the handling, plus the 18's look cool!
cheers,
bidds
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks