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My use is Road Course, which from what I've heard from others is probably the only feasible use other than a drifting. They take a fair bit longer to heat up than A052's or RE71's, but they are 2/3rd's the price and almost as fast. Getting them up to temperature before getting power cut is a challenge though, At least at Buttonwillow.@TacoSteve - What use case brought you to the Nexen Sur4G's? AutoX, Road Course, or Street? Not a common tire to hear about.
Interesting- from what I can find in 275/35R19 (the widest they make) they are more than AO52's (and unobtanium as well), but tire prices vs size is all over the place if you aren't running that exact size.They take a fair bit longer to heat up than A052's or RE71's, but they are 2/3rd's the price and almost as fast.
They certainly are hard to find, but these are 275/40R18's. Not sure if it's more available than the 19's. I bought two sets when I they came in stock.Interesting- from what I can find in 275/35R19 (the widest they make) they are more than AO52's (and unobtanium as well), but tire prices vs size is all over the place if you aren't running that exact size.
Thanks for the other info!
For what it is worth, I was not happy with rt 660s in 275 on a 19x9.5 wheel. I previously ran REs in 265 on the same wheels. The RTs needed way more pressure, like 40 psi and still were heavy on the shoulders at the same camber (-2.4) in the front. Maxed out on the original mpp arms.
Perhaps a 265 would have less tread or sidewall squirm and present a better shape for the same camber angle?
Yoko A052? That's the current winning tire.Unfortunately I don't see another viable 200tw option for AutoX use
Yoko A052? That's the current winning tire.
BFG Rival 1.5s are supposedly pretty great too and easier to drive than RE71s
how much camber is required to fit these under the guards, also are you needing coils to fit the 10.5s?10.5 ET30 is max on stock sheet metal, judging by MPP’s beautiful red euro 3P settings.
What are they, do you know?10.5 already requires different offset front and rear. That is not something I would do with DD.
No offense, but I really don't understand why you would want to DD with super wide wheels and tires. You are just going to kill your efficiency.What are they, do you know?
I think it somewhere around a +20, with 18's there is some grinding needed on the upright to clear the inner barrel. And you'll need somewhere around -3 degrees of camber, but this all depends on the tire. You may also have to roll fenders. Like @MasterC17, this makes no sense for a daily driver. 9.5" is plenty for street use.What are they, do you know?
So the questions stems from just wondering if you could daily an 18x10 square with 285s just for looks. Will it get tracked.... probably not.To pile on- 10"+ wheels on a daily driver is a massive tradeoff of efficiency. I already use almost double the rated energy in my car running 265's (some of this is how I drive of course). I can't imagine how you'd have to drive on the street to take advantage of this extra tire.
To add useful information to the discussing- just talking about wheels is kinda pointless. You can make any wheel fit with the right offset, it's just math. For every half an inch of width beyond 10" you need to add 6mm of offset.
But the assumption is that you're going to run tires that are the right size for those wheels, and it's the tire that will rub the control arm or the fender. But this may not be the same issue if you are going for some aesthetic purpose instead of performance, and are running very stretched tires. But a 10" wheel is generically talking about ~285+ section width tires, which are getting very tight and need careful fitment down to the exact tire model.
@BadassBob If you are actually looking for a track-able setup that you can also daily drive, ask that question, but if you are seriously looking at something that is just for the street, more information is needed as to why you want such a wide wheel (and assumed tire). Remember that in a Model 3, wider tires don't make the car any faster in a straight line on pavement.