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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Wheel Advice - Ridox kit


Thomasjones

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Physics isn't really an opinion. The bigger the wheel, the smaller the side wall. The smaller the side wall, the less flex you have in the tyre when accelerating. The less flex you have in the tyres, the less grip you have. The less grip you have, the more likely you will find yourself in a ditch.

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All you need to know is in my answer to your question. Yes there is everything wrong with doing that unless you want to find yourself and your Supra sitting in a ditch or worse.

 

Changing wheel size to give a desired ground clearance is very how you dooin', that is a really horrible way to go about it. Is the increase in ride height needed for ground clearance reasons or wheel arch to tyre fouling issues? Post some photos before you create a ditch finder mongrel.

 

Physics isn't really an opinion. The bigger the wheel, the smaller the side wall. The smaller the side wall, the less flex you have in the tyre when accelerating. The less flex you have in the tyres, the less grip you have. The less grip you have, the more likely you will find yourself in a ditch.

 

Reality! What self respecting reciprocating idiot gives a £uck about that? :looney:

 

Keep up guy's, nineteen's were in last year, twenties are now Officially where it's at, as seen on T.V. :shrug:

 

 

image

 

 

Every idiot knows that since 2017, a trendy Supra's wheel size should match the last 2 numbers of the year!

 

Look out 2024? :rlol:

 

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Edited by David P (see edit history)
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I thought the issue was the mismatch of wheels.

 

David. With my 325 R888 I now get traction okay unless I launch it.

 

I would personally only put 19s on a car if you can get a 12J at least. For the reasons listed above.

 

Get that sidewall wrong and it's dangerous ground. I mean I had run flat Michelins pilot sports and the stiff sidewall made the wheels spin at 80mph on WOT on full boost (even on low setting).

 

R888 have a really soft side wall but I'm sure the compound they are made from also play the major role in their grip.

 

I'd hate to think what any Supra would be like on 19s with say a 265-285 width and a stiff side wall.

Edited by Noz (see edit history)
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I thought the issue was the mismatch of wheels.

 

Partly is mate. Order of preference for drivability and handling would be the stock (f)17"/®17" then (f)18"/®17" and lastly (f)18"/®18".The latter of the three being most effective on a 40 profile front and back.

 

The the reverse hotrod idea on a RWD car :jester: Wanting to run 18" on the front and 19" on the rear because you don't want to buy four wheels the same size and want a more ground clearance. Madder than a bag full of badgers. :twak:

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Physics isn't really an opinion. The bigger the wheel, the smaller the side wall. The smaller the side wall, the less flex you have in the tyre when accelerating. The less flex you have in the tyres, the less grip you have. The less grip you have, the more likely you will find yourself in a ditch.

 

This was all I was looking for.... an actual explanation. Thanks Adam

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