RUNN1N
Senior Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I'm located in central Ohio, so we get enough winter that I'll need to put away the OEM tires for ~4 months/year. I want to use the OEM wheels during winter, and get something more fun to use in the warmer months with the OEM tires. The FL5 is the family's secondary vehicle, so it can stay inside for the worst of winter weather, but I'll need to be able to do school-duty, etc. during routine Ohio cold/wet weather. I drive pretty conservatively in general and have no problem doing so even more based on weather/passengers. Looks aren't so much a concern, I don't want to end up in a ditch.
All-Season/Winter tire options are understandably limited in 265/30/19 (DWS 06+, basically) and quite expensive. If I go up to 265/35/19 or even 275/40/19, I can get a range of "Ultra High-Performance All-Season", "Grand Touring All-Season", and even "Performance Winter / Snow" tires at lower prices. Assuming the suspension is OEM, this calculator suggests the tire at 275/40/19 will ultimately sit 1.2" closer to the fender (it appears there's room) and the inner sidewall will be .2" closer to the frame (I assume there's room), though the speedometer will be off ~9%: https://tiresize.com/wheel-offset-calculator/
Is a 275/40/19 going to rub? It sounds like it'd fit on the OEM wheel, no? My apologies if this has been asked before--I've tried to read myself into a wheel/tire expert, but this stuff seems unnecessarily tricky.
All-Season/Winter tire options are understandably limited in 265/30/19 (DWS 06+, basically) and quite expensive. If I go up to 265/35/19 or even 275/40/19, I can get a range of "Ultra High-Performance All-Season", "Grand Touring All-Season", and even "Performance Winter / Snow" tires at lower prices. Assuming the suspension is OEM, this calculator suggests the tire at 275/40/19 will ultimately sit 1.2" closer to the fender (it appears there's room) and the inner sidewall will be .2" closer to the frame (I assume there's room), though the speedometer will be off ~9%: https://tiresize.com/wheel-offset-calculator/
Is a 275/40/19 going to rub? It sounds like it'd fit on the OEM wheel, no? My apologies if this has been asked before--I've tried to read myself into a wheel/tire expert, but this stuff seems unnecessarily tricky.
Sponsored