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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

probabally a blonde wheel question


Guest red thunder

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Guest red thunder

hi these question's may have been asked before but i looked and could not find what i was after. also i'm a woman and know sh*t about wheels which doesn't help!!!

 

i'm after some new 18" alloys for my 1994 supra cause mine let it down and iv'e also been told the current wheels are toyota standard alloys but not for a supra for some other toyota.

 

i'd like to know what the standard spec should be and what i should ask for??? some companies have the make and model selector but i don't trust them to get the right size from previous experience.

 

also i have noticed some supras have wider alloys on the back is this needed??? and if so do you buy front and back separate or do companies do sets???

 

also someone said something about spacers are these a good thing as i have heard they can damage things???

 

sorry about all the questions!!! and an advanced thankyou to anyone that can help me!!!

 

xxx red thunder xxx

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Guest morganl7

Hiya,

 

From personal experience, I wouldn't recommend Rare Rims as a company to order from. The website is very good as you can upload a picture of your car and view the wheels on it however, I ordered some alloys from this company back in May and have still not received them! Two weeks ago I cancelled my order and looked elsewhere. The alloys I'm buying are 8 1/2 width front and 9 1/2 width rear.

 

Good luck with your search!

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As with so many mods, wheels are a compromise - a non-turbo uses 16 inch diameter, 8 inch wide rims, 50 offset, with 225x50 rubber all round. The TT uses 17 inch rims, can't remember the rest.

 

Bigger, wider wheels means more weight and more pressure on suspension components, so more bush and ball joint wear. The trade off being more traction. You need to decide what you want from it.

 

Spacers are generally considered to be a bad idea, unless your car never gets driven properly - they increase the track width, which increases leverage forces on the hubs, which breaks stuff faster. Also the suspension geometry _should_ be adjusted to suit, but normally isn't. If you want/need a wider track, buy wider rims.

Edited by Ark (see edit history)
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Standard wheel specs are:

PCD 5 x 114.3 mm

Centre bore 60.1 mm

Offset ET50

Width:

non-turbo: 16x8 all round

turbo (small brakes) 16x8 front, 16x9 rear

turbo (large brakes) 17x8 front, 17x9.5 rear

 

Most common offset in aftermarket wheels is probably ET35. Some people find that changing the offset affects the handling, some people don't.

 

Aftermarket wheels will probably need spigot rings to match the wheel's centre bore to the car's hub.

 

There should be no reason to use spacers if you are buying new wheels, but if you ever do use them, make sure that they are hubcentric.

Edited by garethr (see edit history)
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