Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey people,

I have a set of 19 x 8 inch (offset+35) Lenso s7 modify rims for sale. these are in fantastic condition. They have been on the car around 4 months and have travelled only 2000kms. So basically brand new. They also come with 23/35/19 tyres that have around 90% tread on them.

These rims have two sets of patterns in the 5 X 114 and 5x 100. So will bolt on to any Silvia S13, S14, S15, Skyline R32, R33, R34, Supra etc (anything 5 x 114), or any 5 stud honda such as newer preludes, intergras civics etc. Also due to the twin stud pattern 4 x 114 can also be obtained by getting 1 more hole drilled onto the back of the rim which would cost you around $50.

These pics are of the actual rims

IMG_81431.jpg

34aas3.jpg

fittingnewbar9.jpg

Lenso1.jpg

lenso2.jpg

lenso3.jpg

As you can see the rims have silver spokes with mirror polished lip and center caps. These rims retail in stores for between $3500 and $4000 depending on where you go. They are also not being made anymore and are becoming difficult to find.

I am asking $2000ono for the rims and tyres (rims in new condtion, tyres at 90% tread)

or

$1600ono for the rims without tyres (rims in new condtion)

I am located in SA

Feel free to post here or PM me if you have any questions

Sean

Edited by mxtcy
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/107524-19-inch-lenso-s7-modify-rims-tyres/
Share on other sites

Selling as i am returning the car to stock.

The tyres are actually really good, never had any problems with them at all. Good in the dry, wet etc :/ Obviously not as good as a $500 a pop tyre, but still a very solid good tyre

Edited by mxtcy

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

    • If you have the original log book and it didn't have a chassis number quoted, then no money required.  I have "rechassied" a number of race cars, no problem as long as you have the original log book.   Cheers Gary
    • Well the good news is that it won't run any worse with an atmo bov than it does with no bov, I've owned a few Nissans over the years (r32, s15 and now r33), the stalling issue caused by a bov or no bov while still having an afm is easy enough to live with, most people get used to driving them and just feathering the throttle when you come to a stop to avoid it stalling. Changing to a proper ecu with a map sensor is ideal but in the short term I'd just slap in the bov if you really want the whoosh sound. I looked into the pass through type maf like the R35 one above but decided against it as the amount of oil and crap flowing through the hot side would mean you'd have to clean it often to keep it working.
    • Build an 800hp motor. Make it as bullet proof as you want, you WILL still break things. Like, the rest of the car. Heck, even as a dead stock car, things will still break, but the more power, the more everything else will let go easier. From gearbox gear sets, to extra stress on the chassis/mounts, more stress on diff, axles, tailshaft, even the suspension mounts. Check out the motorsport build that last year went to a Bosch motor sport ABS setup, and now can brake so damn hard it's twisting mounts for suspension/subframe etc. Now if the brakes can do it, imagine what happens with super grippy tyres and 800hp in a low gear...   Shit, I'm presently out fixing the girlfriends daily driver that rarely sees past 3,000rpm and is used to cart the dogs around in. Everything WILL break. If you don't want it to break, don't drive it. And then laugh, as it will still break without even being driven!
    • ECUMaster is an Australian company from memory, been around a while, and seem to actually play really well on more unique engine setups. Seems to be more of them being used in the states, and they seem to support more cylinders than most others.   My opinion on stock ECU/Nistune with he AFM, is you can tune around the issue of stalling. It's still a bit of a band-aid, and not the most perfect smoothest setup, but it can make it drive able and not an absolute PITA. But you're still compromising. A vent to atmosphere BOV has the same issue as no BOV with regards to the AFM. Both make the ECU think more air is entering the engine than there really is. And I can't find any hard science/decent evidence that supports the claims all the "you MUST run a BOV of some sort of you'll blow the turbo up". About the only one some people can give of why is "lag between gear shifts", and that is only an issue when your boost source for the waste gate is pre throttle body. I ran my boost source for the TD07S off the inlet manifold. Didn't have weird boost spiking issues, didn't have boost control issues, and on a gear shift the wastegate slammed shut, which meant all exhaust gases would be keeping it going round and round and not waiting for the wastegate to shut again when I stepped off the clutch and back on the loud pedal. It came back on boost in the next gear pretty much instantly.   ECU / tune / BOV choice I think really comes down to a lot more factors than just what you've stated. And personally, especially for daily driving, recirc setup for the BOV, or no BOV. I dislike the really loud BOV when everyone is taking off from the lights etc.
×
×
  • Create New...