April 19, 20169 yr I'm in the planning phase. It looks like the front spring perch will probably be the biggest limiting factor (I'm not afraid of castor bushings, and body trimming). I've seen lots of 27s and 28s, but what about bigger? 29s? Bigger (with a traditional strut top block, and without big spacers)? My particular car is a 2004 Outback VDC, but other models would be relevant. Please post wheel dimensions, too (width AND offset, or original application).
April 19, 20169 yr I like the Maxxis bighorns, not the most aggressive MT but good all around tire 29" is about max with stock outback strut
April 19, 20169 yr BF Goodrich AT K0-2's and I can't say enough about how wonderful they are in this size (255/55/R18), they behave like low profile performance tires on-road and are top notch off-road in snow, dirt, gravel, and shockingly good in mud. http://www.scoobytruck.com/bb/download/file.php?id=880
April 19, 20169 yr Author BF Goodrich AT K0-2's and I can't say enough about how wonderful they are in this size (255/55/R18), they behave like low profile performance tires on-road and are top notch off-road in snow, dirt, gravel, and shockingly good in mud. http://www.scoobytruck.com/bb/download/file.php?id=880 I complete forgot about your rig...I've been using your tire calculator many many times over the last few days. Did you ever try those tires with stock struts? or just the coilovers? Do you know the width/offset of those wheels? Edited April 19, 20169 yr by Numbchux
April 19, 20169 yr 18x8 48mm offset, and BTW on clearance sale now for $109! They clear STi brakes with 20mm spacers and look like they would clear them without the spacer but I never tried. I also never tried them with the stock struts, but if it helps I would measure from the inner tire edge to the wheel well or some other reference point so you could check strut clearance. http://www.tirerack.com/wheels/WheelCloseUpServlet?target=runWheelSearch&initialPartNumber=MD14813BMF&wheelMake=moda&wheelModel=MD14&wheelFinish=Machined+w%2FBlack+Accent&showRear=no&autoMake=Subaru&autoModel=Baja+AWD&autoYear=2004&autoModClar= Edited April 19, 20169 yr by subarubrat
April 20, 20169 yr Author 18x8 48mm offset, and BTW on clearance sale now for $109! They clear STi brakes with 20mm spacers and look like they would clear them without the spacer but I never tried. I also never tried them with the stock struts, but if it helps I would measure from the inner tire edge to the wheel well or some other reference point so you could check strut clearance. http://www.tirerack.com/wheels/WheelCloseUpServlet?target=runWheelSearch&initialPartNumber=MD14813BMF&wheelMake=moda&wheelModel=MD14&wheelFinish=Machined+w%2FBlack+Accent&showRear=no&autoMake=Subaru&autoModel=Baja+AWD&autoYear=2004&autoModClar= Cool. With your 20mm spacer, your backspacing at the tire works out to be pretty close to the setup I'm looking at (I have a set of 17x7 +48s, and looking at 235/65r17 A/Ts). Ditto on the outer diameter. Due to the shape of the spring perch on the strut, I'm not sure there'd be a way to accurately measure it. I've measured the clearance from my existing tire to the perch, and it looks like it should work, but it'll be close.
April 20, 20169 yr Are you looking at ATs or AT K02s? I have used the older ATs and these new K02s are light years ahead of the older technology. If you do run into clearance issues you can always go coilover, they are much more compact in the perch area.
April 20, 20169 yr Author Probably going with Kumho Road Venture AT51s I really don't want to go coilover for several reasons. Mostly cost...
April 21, 20169 yr I complete forgot about your rig...I've been using your tire calculator many many times over the last few days. Did you ever try those tires with stock struts? or just the coilovers? Do you know the width/offset of those wheels? Tire size calculator shmator. Go to tirerack.com, they have a "specs and sizes" that will usually tell you the diameter of all the tires they sell. Including the KO2s.
April 21, 20169 yr Author Tire size calculator shmator. Go to tirerack.com, they have a "specs and sizes" that will usually tell you the diameter of all the tires they sell. Including the KO2s. Oh yea, I've been looking at that, too. Calculators are extremely handy for making quick comparisons of different sizes, but I've also been referencing the measured size (width, diameter, and weight) of several different model tires on tire rack.
April 22, 20169 yr Tire rack and the Tacoma calculator are epic resources in tire planning when used together. You can compare tires and get instant values of size difference in all dimensions by percentage, spedo error, etc. You can also nudge the values to find sizes that are just right or within your limits, lets say you know an inch more than a given size is too much but a half inch would fit, you can try that out and see what size it is in seconds. Also if your considering the cost of tires you can find sizes that are very similar but huge in cost difference due to how widespread they are, for example on my Z the rears are 305/35/20 and the only all season performance radial in that size is $450 each, but by going slightly wider 5mm or so, I found a better rated tire BF goodrich G-force comp2 for about $220 each, very handy tool indeed. https://www.tacomaworld.com/tirecalc
April 22, 20169 yr Author Yep, I use this one quite a bit, too. As it factors in wheel width and offset, too http://www.rimsntires.com/specspro.jsp
April 26, 20169 yr Author First picture of my friend's Forester with the new tires. This is a 2013 forester X Premium, with a 2" ADF lift (strut spacers, and rear subframe spacers), 15x7 +40 Team Dynamics Rally wheels, and 235/75r15 General Grabber AT2s (Spec at 29.1" on Tire Rack). This is with zero trimming, and only a hair of rubbing on the rear of the front wheel well while turning (we will see once we start to flex it out). 2017-07-21_04-21-38 by Numbchux, on Flickr Edited July 21, 20178 yr by Numbchux
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