Minivansomeren
Well-Known Member
Question: what is the widest rear wheel/tire anybody has run without changing suspension or rolling arches?
Background: I’ve seen several references to the rear track on our cars, which is 42mm narrower than the front. This means that the rear hubs sit almost an inch (21mm) further in-board than the fronts. I assumed this is the reason that people run a staggered tire setup that is wider at the rear. However I recently did the math and the common 8” wide et24 wheels don’t change this at all. Compared to a 7” et11 wheel, the lips on staggered wheels are actually 0.3mm further inboard. In other words, the extra inch on a staggered setup is added on the inside, not the outside. So I guess the main benefit of a staggered setup would be handling (better RWD grip) rather than aesthetics?
My question is whether anybody has tried a staggered setup that adds the extra rear width on the outside, rather than the inside? Theoretically that would be a 16x8 et-2 and it would place the rear wheel lips 4mm further out than the fronts, rather than 21mm further in on the stock setup. I recently got a set of BBS RS005 wheels that need to be refinished, and could achieve this by putting 2.5” lips on the rear, giving it a deep-dish look. I have stock ride height (I think) and would like to avoid rolling fenders.
I’ve done a lot of searching on here and found people running 17x9 et20 wheels in the rear, apparently without rubbing. That wheel would be 16mm further out than stock, but not the full inch. Most other people trying to stuff big wheels in the rear have rolled fenders and lowering springs.
Background: I’ve seen several references to the rear track on our cars, which is 42mm narrower than the front. This means that the rear hubs sit almost an inch (21mm) further in-board than the fronts. I assumed this is the reason that people run a staggered tire setup that is wider at the rear. However I recently did the math and the common 8” wide et24 wheels don’t change this at all. Compared to a 7” et11 wheel, the lips on staggered wheels are actually 0.3mm further inboard. In other words, the extra inch on a staggered setup is added on the inside, not the outside. So I guess the main benefit of a staggered setup would be handling (better RWD grip) rather than aesthetics?
My question is whether anybody has tried a staggered setup that adds the extra rear width on the outside, rather than the inside? Theoretically that would be a 16x8 et-2 and it would place the rear wheel lips 4mm further out than the fronts, rather than 21mm further in on the stock setup. I recently got a set of BBS RS005 wheels that need to be refinished, and could achieve this by putting 2.5” lips on the rear, giving it a deep-dish look. I have stock ride height (I think) and would like to avoid rolling fenders.
I’ve done a lot of searching on here and found people running 17x9 et20 wheels in the rear, apparently without rubbing. That wheel would be 16mm further out than stock, but not the full inch. Most other people trying to stuff big wheels in the rear have rolled fenders and lowering springs.
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