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Thread: tyres illegal?

  1. #1
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    tyres illegal?

    Hey guys so i was a friend at the rim shop on the weekend and the bloke took a look at my tyres and wasnt happy. I bought a set of 18" mk5 r32 reps a year ago and still had tyres on them. Anyways the tyre guy said they are illegal because of load rating? the tyres are 215/35 r18. is he right? He told me to go for 225/40 r18? Thinking i want a stretched tyre so would do you guys reccomend?

  2. #2
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    It is not just the size that is important, but the speed and load rating.

  3. #3
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    Yeah a 40 profile on an 18" wheel sounds about right for a Golf.
    Load rating can be found on a label usually behind the fuel cap cover or inside the doors. Whatever you buy it has to be within that load rating limit to be legal.

    Stretched tyres are good but don't overdo it.

  4. #4
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    So i can have 215/35's aslong as the load rating is correct?

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by dubster99 View Post
    So i can have 215/35's aslong as the load rating is correct?
    Load and speed rating
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  6. #6
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    So wat tyre on a 18" rim can i have to have stretched tyres? Does it depend on the lip of the rim also?

  7. #7
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    There are a few things to look out for.

    The tyre size thats the 215/35 or 205/65 width/ratio
    This will affect the actual circumference of the tyre. In your case the tyre will be 9.7% smaller. You speedo will read slower than actual, expect speeding tickets.

    The other thing is the load and speed. Stock tyre might be 92Y. 92 being the load and Y the speed indicator. You must meet these 2.
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  8. #8
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    Stretch will come from fitting a narrow tyre to a wide rim. 205/50-18 will keep the speedo accurate and your 18 wheel is likely to be 1.5 inches wider than a stock 16 wheel. Wheels might be 16x6.5 vs 18x8 etc
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  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by dubster99 View Post
    So i can have 215/35's aslong as the load rating is correct?
    If the tyre is suitable for the rims (Tyre and Rim Standards), has the correct speed and load rating, it should be acceptable. The tyre placard sets the minimum requirements.

    Now some inspection stations (where you have to have annual inspections) can ask for an engineers report if the tyres are not as indicated on the placard to cover themselves, however you simply need to show that the tyre is suitable for the rims and that they have the same or better load and/or speed rating.

  10. #10
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    Just remember that there are also limits on the increase in width and offset. The wheels/tyres fitted must also see the bumpstop (suspension and steering) be the first thing that causes contact. The tyre is also not allowed to project past the bodywork (front wheels in the straight ahead position). You can use wheel arch extensions, however there is a limit on the increase in track. No part of the wheel/tyre shall contact the bodywork or anything else on the vehicle.

    Your local registration authority should have a fact sheet on this.

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