jtlctr
Senior Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I will be needing to replace my OEM tires soon and I'm debating on a few different options. Ideally, I would like to soften the ride a little, as my local roads aren't great and I've run over some patches on the road that made me cringe badly (a few times I thought for sure there would be a bent wheel, but so far so good). That said, I'm also concerned about degrading the sharp steering response. I know there will be a trade off with upsizing the tire profile, but hopefully it's not too noticeable. So, here are the choices I'm wrestling with:
1) $-cost of 4 tires. Keep the stock wheels and get a set of 265/35/19s. This will increase the tire diameter by nearly 1" or 4.13%, add a little weight, but have more cushion. If anyone who has gone this route could weigh in on how the handling was affected and, with the larger diameter effectively reducing the final drive ratio, if acceleration has been effected one way or the other.
2) $$-tires plus about $1600 for wheels. Buy a set of Apex EC-7 or ARC-8 wheels in 18X9.5 with 265/35/18 tires to retain the stock diameter.
3) $$$- tires plus a minimum of around $3K in wheels. Buy a set of Mita or Regamaster 18X10 wheels with 265/35/18 tires which would be a little more stretched over the 10" wheel (which hopefully lessens sidewall flex).
I'd really love a set of Regamasters, but my bank account prefers the stock wheels. lol. Ultimately, I'm far more interested in how the car drives than how it looks. This car is my summer daily and is only driven on the street (shameful, I know).
If anyone would like to share their experience on any of these combos, I'd greatly appreciate it!
1) $-cost of 4 tires. Keep the stock wheels and get a set of 265/35/19s. This will increase the tire diameter by nearly 1" or 4.13%, add a little weight, but have more cushion. If anyone who has gone this route could weigh in on how the handling was affected and, with the larger diameter effectively reducing the final drive ratio, if acceleration has been effected one way or the other.
2) $$-tires plus about $1600 for wheels. Buy a set of Apex EC-7 or ARC-8 wheels in 18X9.5 with 265/35/18 tires to retain the stock diameter.
3) $$$- tires plus a minimum of around $3K in wheels. Buy a set of Mita or Regamaster 18X10 wheels with 265/35/18 tires which would be a little more stretched over the 10" wheel (which hopefully lessens sidewall flex).
I'd really love a set of Regamasters, but my bank account prefers the stock wheels. lol. Ultimately, I'm far more interested in how the car drives than how it looks. This car is my summer daily and is only driven on the street (shameful, I know).
If anyone would like to share their experience on any of these combos, I'd greatly appreciate it!
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