305 45 22
#18
#19
Originally Posted by DoinBigThangs
So I have a 2005 f150 2wd supercab....I want 305 45 22 tires, are these going to fit with no trimming/lifting/etc? Does anyone else have problems with shaking on the freeway?
No front or rear rub, great ride, fills the gap...
#21
Originally Posted by Grandthroblord
All this is good stuff
Anyone know what there offset is?
Cheers
Anyone know what there offset is?
Cheers
http://www.aewheel.com/gallery_vehicle.cfm?id=97
you will see a chart that should help you.
#22
One thing I learned this weekend.
Make sure you buy rims that are hub centric or the vendor sells hub centric rim adapters.
OEM rims are hub centric, which means the hubs on the rotor fit perfectly tight with the open holes in the rims.
This prevents ways for the rim to move around on the rotor when being bolted on, thus throwing the tire and rim out of balance.
We think this may be my problem as I've had vibration problems in the steering wheel and body (Eagle Alloy rims are NOT hub centric). We did a regular ring adapter balance on one wheel and zero'd it out. But when we used a Haweka adapter on the balancer to simulate the hubs on the OEM rotors, that same wheel was 10 oz out of balance.
The new shop I'm working with is calling to see if someone makes hub centric adapters for the 05 F150 and the Eagle Alloy rims.
This has been a huge pain in the butt and has cost me an extra $200 on balancing trips.
Duke
Make sure you buy rims that are hub centric or the vendor sells hub centric rim adapters.
OEM rims are hub centric, which means the hubs on the rotor fit perfectly tight with the open holes in the rims.
This prevents ways for the rim to move around on the rotor when being bolted on, thus throwing the tire and rim out of balance.
We think this may be my problem as I've had vibration problems in the steering wheel and body (Eagle Alloy rims are NOT hub centric). We did a regular ring adapter balance on one wheel and zero'd it out. But when we used a Haweka adapter on the balancer to simulate the hubs on the OEM rotors, that same wheel was 10 oz out of balance.
The new shop I'm working with is calling to see if someone makes hub centric adapters for the 05 F150 and the Eagle Alloy rims.
This has been a huge pain in the butt and has cost me an extra $200 on balancing trips.
Duke