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legit 12.5 width tyres on 8s?
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
legit 12.5 width tyres on 8s?
Ive herd a few people saying that BFs , Procomps and MTRs are all leagally able to be run on 8s is this true (WRITTEN DOCS REQUIRED ) so i can decide with tyres i can run in this LITIGATION F@CKING WORLD we live in no jail wanted in the result of an accident as I would like my sphincta to remane its ORIGINAL size
Lockers or Knockers ,both will make for fun.
HYBRID 4B PRDUCTS Visit Tigerz11 here http://www.tigerz11.com.au/ and LOCKTUP 4x4 here http://www.locktup4x4.com.au/ cheers
www.trailtrack4x4.com
HYBRID 4B PRDUCTS Visit Tigerz11 here http://www.tigerz11.com.au/ and LOCKTUP 4x4 here http://www.locktup4x4.com.au/ cheers
www.trailtrack4x4.com
for 12.5" tyres
bfgs and procomps have minimum 8" rim width recommendation from the manufacturer
gy mtr, coopers mt does not
Are you sure? I thought the RTA's enforced what ever the tyre manufacturers specify in which case BFG and Goodyear specifiy 8.5" minimum rim width for their 12.5s whereas Cooper and Procomp specify 8"minimum. This is all according the spec sheets on the various manufacturers websites.
cheers
MattC
Rim width
I think there's a disrcrepancy between what the manufacturer recommends, and what the Oz legalities say. I ran 33" BFGs on 15x8s and they were legal according to WA road rules, and I think with the National regs (can't remember what they're called now), but all the manufacturers seem to recommend 8.5" for 33's now. Gets back to wheel width and offset vs legal change in track of the vehicle.
The rules vary state to state on what you can run legally but they all require the rim and tyre to be an 'approved combination'.
The regulations covering tyre fittment allows you to use 'approved combinations' from sevral rim and tyre manuals. Australia, USA, Europe, England (and some more) have their own Tyre and Rim manuals. The most useful one in the "2003 Year Book - The Tire & Rim Association Inc" as it lists a lot more of the larger size tyres. This is the USA version.
For all different widths, profile and roll outs it list load ratings, inflation pressure and approved rim widths. If you take a 31, 33, 35 or 37 x 12.5 on a 15 inch rim (just for an example) the approved rim widths are
8 1/2" J
9" J
10" J
11" J
The 31 can also go on a 9 1/2" J
The 'J' refers to the profile of the rim. JJ rims cam be substituted for J rims with no probs.
As you can see 8" wide rims are not acceptable for a 12.5" wide tyre. The widest tyre I could see listed for a 8" wide rim is a 11.5" wide tyre.
Let me know if you want furter details/proof.
The regulations covering tyre fittment allows you to use 'approved combinations' from sevral rim and tyre manuals. Australia, USA, Europe, England (and some more) have their own Tyre and Rim manuals. The most useful one in the "2003 Year Book - The Tire & Rim Association Inc" as it lists a lot more of the larger size tyres. This is the USA version.
For all different widths, profile and roll outs it list load ratings, inflation pressure and approved rim widths. If you take a 31, 33, 35 or 37 x 12.5 on a 15 inch rim (just for an example) the approved rim widths are
8 1/2" J
9" J
10" J
11" J
The 31 can also go on a 9 1/2" J
The 'J' refers to the profile of the rim. JJ rims cam be substituted for J rims with no probs.
As you can see 8" wide rims are not acceptable for a 12.5" wide tyre. The widest tyre I could see listed for a 8" wide rim is a 11.5" wide tyre.
Let me know if you want furter details/proof.
The rules vary state to state on what you can run legally but they all require the rim and tyre to be an 'approved combination'.
The regulations covering tyre fittment allows you to use 'approved combinations' from sevral rim and tyre manuals. Australia, USA, Europe, England (and some more) have their own Tyre and Rim manuals. The most useful one in the "2003 Year Book - The Tire & Rim Association Inc" as it lists a lot more of the larger size tyres. This is the USA version.
For all different widths, profile and roll outs it list load ratings, inflation pressure and approved rim widths. If you take a 31, 33, 35 or 37 x 12.5 on a 15 inch rim (just for an example) the approved rim widths are
8 1/2" J
9" J
10" J
11" J
The 31 can also go on a 9 1/2" J
The 'J' refers to the profile of the rim. JJ rims cam be substituted for J rims with no probs.
As you can see 8" wide rims are not acceptable for a 12.5" wide tyre. The widest tyre I could see listed for a 8" wide rim is a 11.5" wide tyre.
Let me know if you want furter details/proof.
The regulations covering tyre fittment allows you to use 'approved combinations' from sevral rim and tyre manuals. Australia, USA, Europe, England (and some more) have their own Tyre and Rim manuals. The most useful one in the "2003 Year Book - The Tire & Rim Association Inc" as it lists a lot more of the larger size tyres. This is the USA version.
For all different widths, profile and roll outs it list load ratings, inflation pressure and approved rim widths. If you take a 31, 33, 35 or 37 x 12.5 on a 15 inch rim (just for an example) the approved rim widths are
8 1/2" J
9" J
10" J
11" J
The 31 can also go on a 9 1/2" J
The 'J' refers to the profile of the rim. JJ rims cam be substituted for J rims with no probs.
As you can see 8" wide rims are not acceptable for a 12.5" wide tyre. The widest tyre I could see listed for a 8" wide rim is a 11.5" wide tyre.
Let me know if you want furter details/proof.
I have seen 8.5 x 15" for sale. Have you had trouble finding some?
Modes of failure...rolling off the rim, separting from the bead maybe.
Just becaue the rim and tyre is not a listed combination is not a guarantee that the combination will fail but wouldn't like to try and explain my way out of it if they did fail.
Modes of failure...rolling off the rim, separting from the bead maybe.
Just becaue the rim and tyre is not a listed combination is not a guarantee that the combination will fail but wouldn't like to try and explain my way out of it if they did fail.
I phoned around when I was looking for rims recently but had no luck sourcing them. I was looking for a set of rims for my DD tyres which happen to be a second hand set of 33 12.5 R15s with about 10-15,000 ks of tread left on them. If I had found a set of 15 x 8.5 rims I would have jumped at them!!!
To ultimately get away from the 15x8 problem, I have chosen to purchase a set of 16x8 rims that I will ultimately run a set of 315 75 R16s on legally. I am currently running my 36" swampers on these rims until the 33s wear out and I can get the 315s.
Until then I have joined the ranks of the thousands of 4WDers in Oz running 12.5 tyres on 8" rims...
To ultimately get away from the 15x8 problem, I have chosen to purchase a set of 16x8 rims that I will ultimately run a set of 315 75 R16s on legally. I am currently running my 36" swampers on these rims until the 33s wear out and I can get the 315s.
Until then I have joined the ranks of the thousands of 4WDers in Oz running 12.5 tyres on 8" rims...
Ahhh... but afaik 8.5" rims are illegal on most 4wds and can't be engineered according to the NSW RTA website.
http://rta.nsw.gov.au/registration/downloads/vsi09.pdf
204mm = 8" so unless the manufacturer spec'd wider than 8" from the factory....
We just had a big thread on AusJeep started by someone having to sell their 10" rims from their Wrangler after being warned by the local police to get rid of them
http://rta.nsw.gov.au/registration/downloads/vsi09.pdf
Four wheel drive vehicles. For these vehicles, except where the original manufacturer provides to the contrary, the maximum wheel width is the lesser of the maximum for rear wheels on your vehicle or 204mm, the front and rear wheel wheel widths shall be the same.
204mm = 8" so unless the manufacturer spec'd wider than 8" from the factory....
We just had a big thread on AusJeep started by someone having to sell their 10" rims from their Wrangler after being warned by the local police to get rid of them
That's interesting... cause in my RTA Vehicle Standards Information bulletin No9 Rev.2 Apr '98 it states: Vehicles built to comply with ADR24 (after1/1/1973) Tare weight of 1201 & over kg, allowable rim with increase above the widest optional wheel avaliable as original for the axle assembly used is 51mm or 2.0 inches, WITH certification of an engineers certificate...
MQ, the url I posted is the doc you mention and it does confirm what you said. However the way I read it, you must not only meet the vehicle age/weight restrictions but also the special conditions for FWD, RWD, 4WD, etc as appropriate. In which case greater than 204mm cannot be engineered unless factory fitted.
Just the way I read it - I'm no expert
cheers
MattC
Just the way I read it - I'm no expert
cheers
MattC
True it is vague... i think that's how the RTA guys like it The way I see it, there would be very few police that would defect for the 10". Coppers as a "general rule" (hear we go ) only are intrested in riceburners, whereas 4wders "usally" keep to themselves... But there is always a Highway boy who needs to fill his quota Therefore the only drama I see is insurance in an accident if the vehicle is towed.
In the mean time i have had a chat with 3 of the RTA inspectors at work and they said they would all pass it if it was cerified with a sig.
In the mean time i have had a chat with 3 of the RTA inspectors at work and they said they would all pass it if it was cerified with a sig.
You are probably right - anyway my 33's are only skinny 10.5s
I actually took my Jeep to the ACT RTA lunctime today to get the engineers certificate 'endorsed'. They told me I don't need the 'spray suppressors' the engineer spec'd since the gap between the tyre and the flare is not that big. Plus I don't need the cover I made for my roller fairleads either (engineer spec'd again) They said they are rounded enough and I should just hook the cable hook to the eylets under the bullbar rather than having it sitting snug against the fairlead.
Everything else a-ok
Chatting to the inspectors they said they really only bust 4wds with really big lifts and no mud flaps / not enough flares / rubbing / fouling etc - including vehicles that throw up too much spray in the wet....
However, they didn't accept my stat dec that I had changed my speedo drive gear and measured it against my GPS.... I have to go get a calibration certificate from a proper tester. Fortunately the mob that calibrate the taxi meters was not far and I am booked in for Friday. Once they have a copy of that I'm legal - woohoo.
cheers
MattC
I actually took my Jeep to the ACT RTA lunctime today to get the engineers certificate 'endorsed'. They told me I don't need the 'spray suppressors' the engineer spec'd since the gap between the tyre and the flare is not that big. Plus I don't need the cover I made for my roller fairleads either (engineer spec'd again) They said they are rounded enough and I should just hook the cable hook to the eylets under the bullbar rather than having it sitting snug against the fairlead.
Everything else a-ok
Chatting to the inspectors they said they really only bust 4wds with really big lifts and no mud flaps / not enough flares / rubbing / fouling etc - including vehicles that throw up too much spray in the wet....
However, they didn't accept my stat dec that I had changed my speedo drive gear and measured it against my GPS.... I have to go get a calibration certificate from a proper tester. Fortunately the mob that calibrate the taxi meters was not far and I am booked in for Friday. Once they have a copy of that I'm legal - woohoo.
cheers
MattC
mattc wrote: Chatting to the inspectors they said they really only bust 4wds with really big lifts and no mud flaps / not enough flares / rubbing / fouling etc - including vehicles that throw up too much spray in the wet....
Hmmm.... better get those rubber flaps on the 1/4 chop soonish
All you can see from behind is a FULL 33 / 36.
mattc wrote: They told me I don't need the 'spray suppressors' the engineer spec'd since the gap between the tyre and the flare is not that big.
your engineer, John Wilson I presume, only told you that because that was the last thing they tried to use an excuse to keep my car off the road a few months ago..
mattc wrote:However, they didn't accept my stat dec that I had changed my speedo drive gear and measured it against my GPS.... I have to go get a calibration certificate from a proper tester.
They didn't understand the equation that I had written down to show that my non-standard ratios match my non-standard tyre size, so they couldn't argue that point with me..
There is special mention of winches on the RTA guidelines for projections. The local RTA said 'cos the rollers are rounded it is ok (I don't need the protective cover I made). They don't accept forward facing driving light mounting tabs, fishing rod holders, fornt mounted towbars/drawbars etc - basically anything 'sharp'. The NSW RTA website has diagrams etc to explain.
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