Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I've just gotta set of avs model 6 17x10's to go on the rear of my 32..

turns out i put them on and the inside lip of the rim rubs on my rear hicas powersteering rack (right on the end)

anyone know what i can do to overcome this? spacers, lower control arm change?

everything is stock suspention wise, except a set of JIC coilovers..

anyone know anything about fitting big fat rims, let me know

thanks

I have a set of 18x9.5 on the rear of my car and when I lowered the rear, the camber increased and the inside lip of my rim was rubbing on the lower part of my coil-over suspension.

I solved this by putting on some 8mm spacers and it doesnt rub anymore. However if I want to lower my car any more (and I do), I'll need to get a set of hubcentric spacers (maybe 20mm or so) and that would in effect give the lug nut the same amount of thread to bite onto and push the wheel out of the guard slightly more.

So from my experience, spacers are the answer - if you want anything up yo 10mm you can get them from places like Repco for $30-$45.

i agree get rid of hicus especially if its drift car

u should be running 1 deg or less for drift so you will have to flare gaurds and add small spacer

what offset are they ?

they are +45 and my coilovers make them sit a little lower than the guard anyways. but i am going to roll them

at the moment, i have a 5mm spacer in there and they still rub on my hicas power steering rack..

i have the lockbar in place.. so your saying i can take that whole rack out and it will still be okay? even tho the hicas bit is connected to a control arm or something next to the coilover?

post-59748-1250237923_thumb.jpg

this is what they look like at the moment, with a 5mm spacer in place, still with a bit of room above the tire itself

post-59748-1250237983_thumb.jpg

this is where it is rubbing, on the little pod on the end of the hicas power steering rack

even with the 5mm spacer, it still rubs

can i remove this whole rack entirely?

17 x 10's on a gts-t is a pipe dream under standard rear guards!

pipe dream?

my mate was running 11's on the rear of his R32 gtst four door with slightly rolled guards without a problem

obviously with different offset than i have

Edited by fourdoorlove

hmmmm looks like im pulling the grinder out... might grind a little bit back, not too much of course, cant have the whole rack falling apart, see if i can get a few mm's there and maybe add a slightly bigger spacer, again not too big tho

fingers crossed

Buy rims that fit.

Spacers.. grinding parts etc is as the person above me said, dodgy...

Rims falling off the car isnt a joke :S

See video below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3oXGbVqfFMc

Edited by br3ndan

thats taking it a bit far i think, that video is a joke if you ask me

ive got plenty of room left on my studs and im only using a 5mm spacer, once i lowered the car back down it didnt rub as the rear camber over compensated for the space between the rim and the hicas, so they fit fine without rubbing

but that is the apsolute maximum size wheel id go with

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • After using a protractor for an actually accurate assessment of what is required,  and by NOT using my uncalibrated eyeball I worked out I need a 25° silicone bend from the TB ro the MAF, but, my choice was either a 30° or a 23° (23° is a weird spec), so I grabbed the 23° one from Raceworks I also grabbed 1mtr of 3" straight from Just Jap, I needed 350mm, but they only had 300mm, or 1mtr lengths....meh Also ordered a 1/2" hose bulkhead fitting from fleabay, this has a smoothish mushroom looking head (they are designed for below the water line of boats) that will fit inside the bend, the hose bit and threaded bit looks to long, but nothing that a hacksaw cannot fix if required, the hose will then just get jamed on the threaded bit up to the retaining nut Fingers crossed and the unsightly amount of hose clamps will be reduced down to 4 once all the parts arrive 
    • Oil change does not trigger code 21. Code 21 is for coilpacks primary side connection. You can try to clear the code with a battery disconnect, hold down the brake pedal to drain capacitors through the brake lights with the ignition on for 10-15 seconds before you reconnect the battery. I have seen R35 coil conversion permanently cause this code with no ill effects so it might be the resistance it wants to see isn't quite right on one or more coilpacks. Could be inside the ECU, could be the harness, could be a coil. You can test it all if you want or just ignore until the car actually starts misfiring.
    • I forgot you have a Nistune ECU. Use Nistune to do all the tests I mentioned instead of faffing with 30+ year old electrical connectors. You can read MAF volts off that too, there are reference values in the service manual to tell you roughly what it should be in different conditions.
    • No. I think it might be the AFM. Hence the use of the terms "swaptronics", which implies the use of swapping out electronics for the purpose of diagnosis. It's about the only way to prove that a small/niggling/whatever problem with an AFM or a CAS or similar is actually caused by that AFM/CAS/whatever. A known good item swapped in that still gives the same problem is likely to be caused somewhere else. They're all the same. Spraying AFMs with cleaner is an each way bet between cleaning it and f**king it.
    • Oh wow! This might actually work amazingly. Do you know the ratio of the diff? I was told the only thing you need to make sure of is if the front & rear diff ratios are the same. Ours is a 4.083 Thanks!
×
×
  • Create New...