Wider tires w/Drop Possible?
ORIGINAL: mxs
when I say "overall diameter" that's the same as the "outside diameter", the diameter of the tire
I don't have a problem, but when you go around saying things like " for those of you who can't read", that is considered rude
also, I'm not a man. and I still disagree with your comment about smaller rims = bad handling.
when I say "overall diameter" that's the same as the "outside diameter", the diameter of the tire
I don't have a problem, but when you go around saying things like " for those of you who can't read", that is considered rude
also, I'm not a man. and I still disagree with your comment about smaller rims = bad handling.
]And sorry, I did not know you are a girl (women?). It's a kind of rare to meet a female on automotive forums, and I did not have any doubt I was talking to male - my kudos to you

You still did not provide any definition to "wheel diameter" so I will use outside/overall diameter we both have same meaning for.

First, the fact everybody probably knows: low profile tires = good handling, high profile tires = bad handling. Agree?
Second, this is exactly what I was trying to say. My bad English probably interfered (seriously). So, I’m trying to rephrase: If you decrease rim size, you have to increase tire height to keep outside/overall diameter constant. In other words, you have to install higher profile tire, hence hurting your handling. If you don’t do this, you hurt your mileage and your speedometer accuracy. Am I clear this time? All this refers to street legal cars you actually drive, not race.
Talking race/sport/cross/whatever cars is a different story. If such a car has been built as a racecar, its tire size is already accounted for in car’s design. If it is converted from a daily driver, you either accept bad fuel economy (which is not that important for most kinds of racing), or change main gear ratio to match tire size change (and not only tire size. As far as I know, they fine-tune this ratio to every specific track in serious racing). Either way, you want as small rim as possible with as low profile tire as possible for sports car.
First, the fact everybody probably knows: low profile tires = good handling, high profile tires = bad handling. Agree?
ORIGINAL: amg6975
ACK! No! Not in all situations. On regular smushy street tires that holds true but not as a general statement.
First, the fact everybody probably knows: low profile tires = good handling, high profile tires = bad handling. Agree?
Aha, now I understand what you meant. Rephrasing, then:
lower profile Falken Azenis= better handling, than higher profile Falken Azenis.
When you compare something, you have to keep all the rest constant, this is to ensure you are comparing apples to apples, not apples to dumplings. This is the standard method of comparison, and I was assuming that you used it.
Are we on the same page now?
lower profile Falken Azenis= better handling, than higher profile Falken Azenis.
When you compare something, you have to keep all the rest constant, this is to ensure you are comparing apples to apples, not apples to dumplings. This is the standard method of comparison, and I was assuming that you used it.
Are we on the same page now?
If you decrease rim size, you have to increase tire height to keep outside/overall diameter constant. In other words, you have to install higher profile tire, hence hurting your handling. If you don’t do this, you hurt your mileage and your speedometer accuracy. Am I clear this time? All this refers to street legal cars you actually drive, not race.
Talking race/sport/cross/whatever cars is a different story. If such a car has been built as a racecar, its tire size is already accounted for in car’s design. If it is converted from a daily driver, you either accept bad fuel economy (which is not that important for most kinds of racing), or change main gear ratio to match tire size change (and not only tire size. As far as I know, they fine-tune this ratio to every specific track in serious racing). Either way, you want as small rim as possible with as low profile tire as possible for sports car.
Talking race/sport/cross/whatever cars is a different story. If such a car has been built as a racecar, its tire size is already accounted for in car’s design. If it is converted from a daily driver, you either accept bad fuel economy (which is not that important for most kinds of racing), or change main gear ratio to match tire size change (and not only tire size. As far as I know, they fine-tune this ratio to every specific track in serious racing). Either way, you want as small rim as possible with as low profile tire as possible for sports car.
I think we reached an agreement finally[sm=happybounce.gif]. And yes, I was trying to explain what I thought you did not understand – because we were using different assumptions to start with, and I did not realise this
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