Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

have a set of hollow 19inch axis rims imported from japan, 90% tread left on all 4. paid $3400 from japan. open to offers! over $1800

untitledai6.png

Axis Reverb - Five spokes and a polished lip hold a lightweight surprise on the Axis Reverb - hollow spoke technology. The Reverb uses a unique casting process that makes each spoke hollow resulting in a lightweight yet very strong wheel. The Reverb comes in sizes for many of today's popular compact front wheel drive cars from 17 and 18 inches, and in staggered sizing for Nissan 350Z, Infiniti G35 Coupe, Lexus SC and GS, Mazda RX7 and RX8 and Toyota Supra. Fitments for cars with factory Brembo brakes like the STi, G35 and 350Z assure a perfect fit over large brakes. Suitable for track use, the Axis 350Z race car uses Reverbs in an 18x9.5 front and 18x10.5 staggered fitment.

Read how Edmunds.com built a Cobra Killer of a Mustang GT and used a set of Reverbs for their light weight and high strength.

Edited by r33gtst-ser2

mate when i look at the picture, and the rims on my car, they look exac the same. but not 100% all i know is they cost me $3500 when i got it from the car dealer, and he got them from japan. tnx mate

ok guys i have found the right ones---- not sure if there 19x8.5, 19x9.5, 19x10.5. the backs are alot wider than the fronts

untitledtpd2.png

untitlednd4.png

Axis Hiro - Five spokes slightly narrow on the way to a deep polished lip, then bend back over the lip for an even deeper stance. The Hiro has perfect staggered fitments for Nissan 350Z, Infiniti G35, Toyota Supra, Mustang, Lexus GS, Lexus SC and even certain Volkswagens and more of today's modern sedans and coupes in 19x8.5, 19x9.5 and a huge 19x10.5. The Hiro boasts generous caliper clearance and will even fit over factory Brembo brakes and many aftermarket kits as well. The Hiro is very popular as a staggered wheel, but also has perfect fitments for non-staggered wheel fitments like Acura TL, TSX, Honda Accord, Mitsubishi Evo VIII and IX, Nissan Maxima, Scion tC, Subaru WRX and STi. Now available in 18 inch applications in non-staggered sizes.

well let me know...

also can you please tell me the offset and width... if they are genuine axis they will be in the inner of the rim

Do you have any pics of the wheels on the car??

What brand tyres?

Yes, i am interested but want to know the width and offset. The details in the description don't help. They just give the "possible" size.

Thanks

Bolt Patterns guys i might swap for after market parts for my 33 gtst. im after---dump from turbo to cat---turbo---power fc---ect. let me know what u got. tnx

5x100, 5x114

5x114

thats all the info there is, sorry guys

this is not my car its just a pic of the rims. not sure what size!!

grrrrkm8.png

Edited by r33gtst-ser2
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Any number of different ways. Have the coils draw sufficient current to provide contact wetting. Use different contacts in the switch, either by material or design, better suited to the low current drawn by a relay coil. Etc.
    • Hmm, how does the R34 manage to have headlight relays then without getting excessive carbon buildup on the headlight switch contacts?
    • Not R7R. Meant to type R&R, obviously enough.
    • Bugger "making it look stock". I put one conventional internally fused Hella relay behind each globe. I just pulled the plugs off the back of the globes and built new loom segments with male and female plug parts to match up to the original loom and the globe, and used the original power wires to each globe coming from the switch through the original loom plug to trigger the relays. Ran a big fat (also separately fused) power wire across the front of the car to feed all the relays. It's as ugly as f**k, but it is wedged down between the headlight and battery on the RHS and the airbox and headlight on the LHS, and no-one ever looks in my engine bay, and on the odd occasion that they do I simply give no f**ks for what they think. Fully reversible - not that you'd ever want to. For f**k's sake. It's a Skyline. They made million of the bloody things. We've been crashing them into roadside furniture for 30 years now. There is a negative side effect to putting relays on the headlights. The coil current is too little to properly clean the contacts in the switches and they get blacked up and you have to open them up every couple of years and clean them manually. I have 25 years of experience on this point.
    • I was poking through the R34 wiring diagrams vs R33 and noticed that the R34 has proper headlight relays while the R33 is like the R32 and sends full headlight power through the headlight switch. I'm not afraid of wiring but I really would like to do this in a way that looks OEM (clipping into open positions on the OEM relay box) and also unlike the factory wiring which interlocks the high beam and low beam on the halogen series 1 GTR headlights I want to make it such that turning on the high beams keeps the low beams on as well. Any advice on how to locate the specific connectors + crimp terminals + relays I need? I was thinking one NO relay for low beams and another for combined high + low running off the factory high beam headlight connector. I don't really want to splice into a crusty old probably discontinued factory harness so fully reversible is my goal here.
×
×
  • Create New...