I reckon if your going to bother getting upgrade rims definitely get at least 17s. Personally, I would get 18s as they look perfect on a golf. 17s are so 90s! A bit too anemic to me, in 2010.
Hi i have got a golf Mk6 silver TDi and im after some nice rims to suit it... dunno what sizes i should get im thinking about sticking with the same size or go 1 or 2 inches up at the most from my 15s. any suggestions? i had my eye on the VW silver and black vision alloys... soooo hot!! but any wheels that look good (maybe a matte black) id defs consider!
Cheers
I reckon if your going to bother getting upgrade rims definitely get at least 17s. Personally, I would get 18s as they look perfect on a golf. 17s are so 90s! A bit too anemic to me, in 2010.
2010 MY11 GOLF R - 5DR | DSG | RISING BLUE | DYNAUDIO + ACC + BLUETOOTH + 19s + RNS510 |
2017 MY17 TIGUAN HIGHLINE - 5DR | DSG | PEARL BLACK | SUNROOF + DAP |
i just thought a general rule was never go up by more than 2 inches.. any bigger and you would need thinner tyres right?
I'm pretty sure the sidewalk on your tyres will get thinner when you go bigger rims, and want to keep the same circumference. Keeping circumference close to original is important so your speedo is not out. There is a really good thing online which let's you calculate it, I'll post it up if you want it.
The only thing this is, NRMA for instance only allows 2 inches bigger and 1 inch wider without affecting your premium. Check out that, if you care about that sort of thing.
2010 MY11 GOLF R - 5DR | DSG | RISING BLUE | DYNAUDIO + ACC + BLUETOOTH + 19s + RNS510 |
2017 MY17 TIGUAN HIGHLINE - 5DR | DSG | PEARL BLACK | SUNROOF + DAP |
Tire size calculator <- Is that the one?
You're absolutely right - as you increase rim diameter, you need to reduce tyre sidewall height (expressed on the tyre sizing as the profile, which is a percentage of tread width) in order to maintain the same (or very close to the same) rolling diameter so that you don't affect your speedo (too much). Your speedo works by calculating the speed by using a known rolling circumference and multiplying that by the number of revolutions per <time period - hour for ultimate speedo reading, but generally per second when doing the actual calcuation>. If you increase the rolling diameter, the speedo reads lower than your real speed, if you decrease it, the speedo will read higher. Reading lower is a quick way to get a speeding fine...
With regards to insurance companies and the allowed variation in rim size/width - that's based on the road rules (which state pretty much the same thing). Any bigger difference than that, and you technically need the car engineered to remain roadworthy.
Nothing to see here...
From memory, in SA (so, quite possibly different from NSW), the maximum deviation in terms of rolling circumference is 4%.
User Ozram has bought a set of 17" Denvers (from the GTI) and painted the inners black (as per the 18" Detroit rim) for his 118TSI. Definitely looks the biz. Have a search through his posts - he has posted images. Finding a set of good-condition second-hand Denvers should be fairly straight-forward and cost-effective too.
2008 MkV Volkswagen Golf R32 DSG
2005 MkV Volkswagen Golf 2.0 FSI Auto
Sold: 2015 8V Audi S3 Sedan Manual
Sold: 2010 MkVI Volkswagen Golf GTI DSG
[MK6 GTI MY11 CW 3-door DSG Sunroof Detroits Dark Tint R LEDs APR Stage 1 (regrettably a few years late)]
If you just go +1 (16") there are lots of rims with good tyres on ebay.
I just bought near new, unmarked 16x7.5 with near new Michelins for $400. $10 for some hubrings (they were 2010 Audi rims with a 66.6mm centrebore) & $5 for decals for the centrecaps to make them look OEM. Tyres by themselves were >$300 new.
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I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
Thanks for the really good advice guys. REXman im with the nrma and i didnt know that so thats something really worth knowing.
@ converted and brad if you have some links id really love to check them out =D
and Manaz is there any way of getting the speedometer sorta re done to calculate the actual speed of the car once u put bigger wheels n tires in? im on my red Ps and speed is something ive really gotta be conscious about if i wanna keep on driving my car
Gidday Mickey, heres a link to some nice VW/ Audi copies:
Tempe Tyres - Product Listing
WRT the speedo, as long as you have the correct profile tyre fitted to your larger rims then the overall diameter of the tyre will be the same as the originals and hence not affect the speedo.
If there is a slight variation (and can happen with different brands of tyres / rims ) then VWs 6% built in speedo error should easily accommodate this.
Brian
Current drive:2016 Golf GTI 40 Years in Pure White
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