Could use some advice on tire/wheel size and offset
#1
Driver
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Oregon
Posts: 176
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Could use some advice on tire/wheel size and offset
Looking at these TSW Valencia's for my GS.
They come in a +40 and +20 offset. I want to fill the wheel well as much as possible but with no modifications. If necessary I could get my fenders rolled, but would like to avoid that if possible. What should I run for offset?
Also, Im lowered on Tanabe DF210's.
19 x 8.5 Front
19 x 9.5 Rear
Also, what would be the largest tires I could fit on these? (looking for a decent amount of sidewall for ride and protection against curbing)
Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you.
They come in a +40 and +20 offset. I want to fill the wheel well as much as possible but with no modifications. If necessary I could get my fenders rolled, but would like to avoid that if possible. What should I run for offset?
Also, Im lowered on Tanabe DF210's.
19 x 8.5 Front
19 x 9.5 Rear
Also, what would be the largest tires I could fit on these? (looking for a decent amount of sidewall for ride and protection against curbing)
Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you.
#2
Lexus Test Driver
iTrader: (16)
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: FL, UK & Deutschland
Posts: 1,149
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I'm not trying to be a **** or anything, but please search through the Offset Q&A thread as this question has been asked and answered repeatedly. Not to mention, on the post before you asked this question on that thread, I provided 3 links (one of which Yakuza already posted) that are invaluable when it comes to fitment.
It's not that no one wants to help, but the questions have already been answered. All you have to do is look for them.
It's not that no one wants to help, but the questions have already been answered. All you have to do is look for them.
#3
Driver
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Oregon
Posts: 176
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I'm not trying to be a **** or anything, but please search through the Offset Q&A thread as this question has been asked and answered repeatedly. Not to mention, on the post before you asked this question on that thread, I provided 3 links (one of which Yakuza already posted) that are invaluable when it comes to fitment.
It's not that no one wants to help, but the questions have already been answered. All you have to do is look for them.
It's not that no one wants to help, but the questions have already been answered. All you have to do is look for them.
Based on your comments, I can use any wheel/tire setup mentioned in the thread for an example as long as its the same offset and size? This is regardless of brand?
+20 or +40 offset 19' wheel.
#5
Driver
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Oregon
Posts: 176
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
If I went with the +20 offset in the rear (there seems to be more gap in the rear than in the front) would that be just too much period, or would that bring the rear wheels more flush with the fenders? If it does I dont mind rolling the fenders. If its just too much period, Ill just go +40 all the way around.
#7
Lexus Test Driver
iTrader: (16)
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: FL, UK & Deutschland
Posts: 1,149
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I understand. However I'm really green when it comes to this stuff so I'm really trying to make sure I dont order something I cant use.
Based on your comments, I can use any wheel/tire setup mentioned in the thread for an example as long as its the same offset and size? This is regardless of brand?
+20 or +40 offset 19' wheel.
Based on your comments, I can use any wheel/tire setup mentioned in the thread for an example as long as its the same offset and size? This is regardless of brand?
+20 or +40 offset 19' wheel.
For the ones you're looking at, I'd run the et20's front and rear. You may or may not need to do fender work, though. But honestly, I'd just go ahead and do it just to future-proof it in the event you want to run something more aggressive in the future.
Here you go:
http://rimtuck.com/setup/view/217
*this is a 9 et27/10 et24... so the fronts you are looking at will sit 3mm further inside the fender, and the rears will extend 2mm (that's if you want to run the et20 offsets). Hope that helps some.
Trending Topics
#10
Lexus Test Driver
iTrader: (16)
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: FL, UK & Deutschland
Posts: 1,149
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Hes asking the question again because obviously, and obviously apparently! lol someones not confident in there knowledge of wheel specs, and like anyone, I put my .02 cents he doesnt want to waste the money on wheels that might look like garbage.... not everyone can read others questions to get theres answered... relax guy, its what were here for, and why theres sections for it.
Hell, I couldn't even get an answer to a NEW question about somewhat extreme fitment because barely anyone reads it anymore. Thankfully, a few people check it every now and then so now I have a bit of direction. But, me asking was AFTER searching that thread, multiple other threads, and even googling it.
No one here minds helping people out, but constantly repeating yourself gets old.
#11
Lead Lap
iTrader: (1)
If you want to maximize tire size (you've mentioned this several times so far) you need to stick with +40 front and rear.
If you go to +20 in the rear, you're going to have to cut the fenders (shouldn't roll the rears on our cars) and/or run much skinnier tires. +20 is nearly 1" further out than +40. That's a lot of tire you'll be sacrificing.
You also have to consider your ride height. Those Tanabe springs don't lower the car very much. With +20 offset in the rear you're going to have poke. It won't be a nice, flush look because you still have fender gap.
This is approximately what +8.5f +9.5r with +40 offset looks like on those exact springs. The only difference here is I had 18mm RCA's in the front. So this picture is actually about 2/3" lower in the front than you are. Also, my wheels are +35 in the front, +40 in the rear.
If you go to +20 in the rear, you're going to have to cut the fenders (shouldn't roll the rears on our cars) and/or run much skinnier tires. +20 is nearly 1" further out than +40. That's a lot of tire you'll be sacrificing.
You also have to consider your ride height. Those Tanabe springs don't lower the car very much. With +20 offset in the rear you're going to have poke. It won't be a nice, flush look because you still have fender gap.
This is approximately what +8.5f +9.5r with +40 offset looks like on those exact springs. The only difference here is I had 18mm RCA's in the front. So this picture is actually about 2/3" lower in the front than you are. Also, my wheels are +35 in the front, +40 in the rear.
#12
Driver
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Oregon
Posts: 176
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
If you want to maximize tire size (you've mentioned this several times so far) you need to stick with +40 front and rear.
If you go to +20 in the rear, you're going to have to cut the fenders (shouldn't roll the rears on our cars) and/or run much skinnier tires. +20 is nearly 1" further out than +40. That's a lot of tire you'll be sacrificing.
You also have to consider your ride height. Those Tanabe springs don't lower the car very much. With +20 offset in the rear you're going to have poke. It won't be a nice, flush look because you still have fender gap.
This is approximately what +8.5f +9.5r with +40 offset looks like on those exact springs. The only difference here is I had 18mm RCA's in the front. So this picture is actually about 2/3" lower in the front than you are. Also, my wheels are +35 in the front, +40 in the rear.
If you go to +20 in the rear, you're going to have to cut the fenders (shouldn't roll the rears on our cars) and/or run much skinnier tires. +20 is nearly 1" further out than +40. That's a lot of tire you'll be sacrificing.
You also have to consider your ride height. Those Tanabe springs don't lower the car very much. With +20 offset in the rear you're going to have poke. It won't be a nice, flush look because you still have fender gap.
This is approximately what +8.5f +9.5r with +40 offset looks like on those exact springs. The only difference here is I had 18mm RCA's in the front. So this picture is actually about 2/3" lower in the front than you are. Also, my wheels are +35 in the front, +40 in the rear.
Btw, when you say poke, you mean the +20's would sit outside the fender a little correct? I dont want that.
Oh, and really nice ride my friend. Looks super sleek and clean. I like it. Love your wheel setup, looks just right.
Thank you!!!
#13
Lead Lap
iTrader: (1)
Trust me. Go with the +40's and beefy tires. Judging by everything you're posting, it's exactly what you're looking for. I'm biased, but I think it also comes with a nice, aggressive, performance-first aesthetic that looks great on the road.
#14
Driver
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Oregon
Posts: 176
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Well, imagine the rear wheels - in the photo I posted - sticking out 1" more than they do. If you were lower they'd camber in and tuck (would require shaving the rear fenders). At the present ride height, though, I think that'd look like a bit too much poke.
Trust me. Go with the +40's and beefy tires. Judging by everything you're posting, it's exactly what you're looking for. I'm biased, but I think it also comes with a nice, aggressive, performance-first aesthetic that looks great on the road.
Trust me. Go with the +40's and beefy tires. Judging by everything you're posting, it's exactly what you're looking for. I'm biased, but I think it also comes with a nice, aggressive, performance-first aesthetic that looks great on the road.
Thank you so much for the advice! It has helped a ton.
Btw, what tire sizes are you running?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
mhenrey
Suspension and Brakes
7
04-16-08 08:04 PM