Combination wheel/tire weights
You definitely do not want tires that won't hold up. cheap no name tires will not last very long, so its really wasting more money in the long run. What does everyone on here think of Falken tires? are they any good or something to avoid?
Spending $600 just for tires on a $4000 car that has 108 HP is a bet over the top, I'd say. I have to put things in perpective, here. Give me NOS or a twin turbo and THEN I may spend a bit more!
ORIGINAL: conceptualpolymer
Seeing that I am pretty much limiting my upgrade wheel sizes to 15 or 16, I decided to see just how much weight I would gain.....or would I gain any......?
Stock setup: 185/65/14s tires = 20 lbs each, steelie wheels = 14 lbs so total = 34 lbs
15-inch upgrade: 205/50/15 tires = 18 lbs, wheels = 12 lbs sototal = 30 lbs
16-inch upgrade: 205/45/16 tires = 17 lbs, wheels = 14.5 lbsso total weight = 31.5 lbs
As you can see, either upgrade is going to be lighter than what I have now. Okay, now the cost differences:
15-inch upgrade: tires = $62x4=$248 (General Exclaim UHP) + $400 Rotas = $648
16-inch upgrade: tires = $66x4=$264 (same brand) + $440 Rotas = $704
I am now leaning towards the 16s, since there would be no weight penalty compared to stock.
These donut 14s are bothering me, every time I take a corner faster than an old lady does. Still, after taxes, a $250 CAI, and Magnaflow cat-back, the total is not small stuff!
Seeing that I am pretty much limiting my upgrade wheel sizes to 15 or 16, I decided to see just how much weight I would gain.....or would I gain any......?
Stock setup: 185/65/14s tires = 20 lbs each, steelie wheels = 14 lbs so total = 34 lbs
15-inch upgrade: 205/50/15 tires = 18 lbs, wheels = 12 lbs sototal = 30 lbs
16-inch upgrade: 205/45/16 tires = 17 lbs, wheels = 14.5 lbsso total weight = 31.5 lbs
As you can see, either upgrade is going to be lighter than what I have now. Okay, now the cost differences:
15-inch upgrade: tires = $62x4=$248 (General Exclaim UHP) + $400 Rotas = $648
16-inch upgrade: tires = $66x4=$264 (same brand) + $440 Rotas = $704
I am now leaning towards the 16s, since there would be no weight penalty compared to stock.
These donut 14s are bothering me, every time I take a corner faster than an old lady does. Still, after taxes, a $250 CAI, and Magnaflow cat-back, the total is not small stuff!
I see an even more pronounced example of people buying overly expensivetires for their 4x4s. They get 35" MT/Rs because those are the "cool" tires to have these days(for over $150-$200/each), but they can barely afford rent or gas because they have to save up to replace suspension/steering parts, or the tires themselves after the tread wears or the belts blow at 20-30Kmiles. Meanwhile, they can barely keep their rig on the road if it's wet or icy out because tires like that don't have any siping. I getless-popular 31" Trxus MTs to run on my mild 4x4 for $115-$120/each, get the same mileage out of them, go the same places offroad, and don't slide much on slick roads unless I want to. If I didn't run heavy mud and snow occasionally I'd go even cheaper with something like the Dunlop Rover ATs from Sam's or Costco. Those are stillbetter than the Goodyear Wrangler ATs my Jeep came with. I destroyed those in less than a month offroad.
After stock tires, I think you'll be pretty pleased with how a 205/45 UHP tire carves turns. I finally got my 195/60s to actually make noise yesterday on dry pavement. Heck, I barely get them to slide in the rain, and the stock suspension is beyond it's limits before I even get to that point. The bodyroll with the Eagles never got that far before the tires just broke loose. Just get used to new tires' limits gradually, and if they aren't up to your standards you can always sell them to get something else.
Good points. And to top it off, the tires that are on the car now are Winston specials that I never heard of. They squeal and roll more than baby pigs! I guess the Fuzions may be a good choice for a low-priced tire. The thing I need to consider is that the car racks up only 3000 miles a year. The tires won't wear out too quickly at that pace, so I should choose carefully.
look at discount tire... www.tires.com, they are always really cheap and usually have free shipping.
The tire prices I listed are from www.tirerack.com. Their prices are generally close to those of Discount tire. I WILL check out the competition, though - thanks.
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galaxygray06
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Jul 29, 2008 02:33 PM




