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matt167

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Posts posted by matt167

  1. I'm not sure why anyone would recommend Futura tires unless you were looking for a humbly cheap tire to pass inspection

    If bolt pattern is 5x100 it will. But 2016 fozzy might be 114.3, I'm not sure.  As far as a tire to get. A Nokian WRG3 SUV 225/60/17 but get them from a Nokian dealer only. Non Nokian dealers won't know how to seat them correctly as the beads are unlike most tires. When seated correctly they are the truest most perfect tire you could get as well as being all weather rated ( 3pt snowflake ) along with a warranty

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  2. 12 hours ago, heartless said:

    just gonna leave this here...

    http://mastercrafttires.com/Tires/Winter.aspx

    Mastercraft is made by Cooper Tires... it is their "budget" line.

    Have purchased them myself - both the all season and the snow tires - they are quite good for the prices.

    Were also a Mastercraft/ Cooper dealer.. What they are producing now for snow is pretty much garbage. The Glacier Grip II ( Weathermaster ST/2 ) is replaced by the Glacier Trek ( Copper Evolution Winter ). The MSR/ Discover M+S has no replacement as of right now although the MSR is pretty much out of production and the Discover M+S is getting hard to get. Half the MSR's have a noticeable wobble and we have sent back more than a few of them that were not usable .. At this point just don't buy it.  The Glacier Trek/ Evo looks ok but it's just meh really. There not too much cheaper than better brands.. The summer/ All seasons like the LSR's really are not that bad, for now.

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  3. Nokian WRG3 ( directional ) and WRG4 ( Asymetrical ) are both all weather tires that will do what you want. There is also a Veredestine Quadrac 5 that will do what you want as it's another all weather tire.

    Yokohama Ice guard isn't bad, but it isn't good. they are not 3 point flake rated that I'm aware of which is the gold standard.  That price is related to the size though. 175/60/15 isn't very expensive

  4. JDM WRX nose cuts are getting harder to find in the GC era, but they aren't really that expensive when you think about it.  I paid $800 for a complete 2001 Forester STI front cut with hood.

     

    https://www.ebay.com/itm/1993-2001-GC8-SUBARU-IMPREZA-WRX-STI-FRONT-END-CONVERSION-NOSE-CUT-V1-V6/223121488551?hash=item33f313baa7:g:L54AAOSw9h9bccH~:rk:19:pf:0

  5. Nothing special about a WRX diff other than the ratio being 3.54:1. Those LSD's will fit any R160 Subaru if you get the right one ( get ahold of Cusco ). True friction based LSD's were available in the 80's in the USA and some special cars JDM market only got them 90's-2000's. You can find them from importers.

    The Viscous coupling in the differentials that makes the VLSD work stops coupling and then it becomes an open diff. It's not a great solution in working condition but Subaru didn't have anything serious in mind.

    Going STI/ R180 differential is a whole different ballgame. You would need STI hubs, and everything outbound to make it work. STI anything is spendy

  6. WRX isn't what you want. All Subaru's except the STI have R160 differentials. Many of them also had the VLSD ( outback's and Forester S/XS 2000+ ). The VLSD is probably not functional in any car you find. It wouldn't do what you think it would if you found a working example.   WRX uses a center differential that is 1.1:1, so the front and rear differential ratios are actually split ratio's. All other Subaru's use a 1:1 center diff and the front and rear gear ratio's are the same. Either 4.11:1 for manual or 4.44:1 for automatic ( JDM turbo and Forester XT manual is 4.44, in general )

    Axles changed by the years and models, but you can generally make anything work. Automatic/ manual axles are different lengths but interchange, basically.. All in all, a 2000-2004 Outback LL Bean or other with the H6 EZ30 will be a good donor. A 1992-1997 Subaru SVX with it's EG33 H6 also had 5x4.5" bolt wheels and would allow you to run truck rims if you wanted .

  7. I couldn't find any steel 18" that would clear the brakes. Seems a lot just run cheap aftermarket wheels because of it. So had to get the cheap alloys. They were like $450 shipped. I'm sure they will bend on impact and save the car should that happen.

    Do you know what frequency the 2019 STI TPMS runs at? I've read 433mhz but Tire rack and Fastwrx both show a 315mhz as being correct. I can't find sensors for it from Subaru to cross a part number, only the $108 control box

    Reason being, the Autel TS401 is available on Amazon with 4 433mhz MX sensors included for $159. That gets a $139 programmer for about $50 if I can use the 433 mhz sensors. Then I could just clone the stock sensors id's, or use the programmer in conjunction with the TPM quickset

  8. My girl got a 2019 STI last month to replace her aging 2004 WRX that was developing a number of problems.  Car will need snow tires for winter, and 235/35 19 or 245/35 19 ( factory sizes ) pretty much have zero avilable, and going to a 225/40/19 which has a few tires available will run about $300 each installed.

    Then I got looking, and going to a 225/45/18 is right at the same diamater as the 245/35/19 and good snow tires can be had for $150...  cheap 18" wheel choices in 5x114.3 are vast.  Is there any reason a basic 18x8.5" with +35 offset won't work on a 2019 STI? I found some nice looking ones for $420/4. I know she should have TPMS sensors, but that's not a problem. I have an ATEQ TPM Quickset that my boss was nice and gave me cause he couldn't figure it out, and 4 sensors are like $50

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