Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

At minimum you can run a 215 on a 9.5 rim so perhaps you would squeeze a 205 on a 9" rim. I wouldnt try as a 205 would be like running a 10 profile on the rim, the walls might even touch the ground.

8 inch youve got no isses.

lol asked the kunt again today and he said its not possible :blush:

would still like to get it done though with wider tires...

has anyone done this or know about whats possible on what?

If you want to stay legal then look here:

http://www.1010tires.com/TireSizeCalculator.asp

If not then here:

http://www.fatlace.com/hellaflush/

These guys will stretch anything on any wheel :ph34r:

I've done 205/50/17s on 9s, was easy because they were reverse mount - no baby elephant or anything special needed. If your rims arent reverse mount they might be a bit of a gina but it's do able. Don't have any pics but they do end up looking pretty stretched.

I run 265/35 on my 12's and 235/40's on my 11's..... and had 225/45 on my 10's... I ALWAYS run 215/45 on 9's.... so a 205 is definatley doable.

If you have a "high performance" 205 it'll be even easier as they arent actually a 205... more like a 210 or a 215... the sidewalls are thicker.

it's easily done, but as said before... 205 is VERY narrow. I dont like running 215/45 on 9's on the rear.

up to you though.

needs lower profile! lol

so 205s on 9"s IS doable?

abu post some pics of the 215s on 9/9.5 dont be lazy :)

I will maybe get some tonight if I can be bothered

Its can be done, the only problem with stretched tires is getting them to inflate once on the rim, thats what most tire places have issues with

Its generally pretty good with most Jap rims, you can inflate them quiet easily

GRRR Google it ..

Anyways here.. Its do able..

DSC03523.jpg

215/35/18 on a 9.5 rim.. Might be a 10" Tell the tyre guy to stop being a pussy wack the 205 on the 8 inch and run around until they die..

Edited by DECIM8

205 on a 8" rim is fine, 215 on a 9" is pushing it a little but definitely possible.

Not the best pic, but you still get the idea, here's a pic of my car with a 205/50/16 on a 8" rim, barely looks stretched at all...

post-5850-1214392126_thumb.jpg

GRRR Google it ..

Anyways here.. Its do able..

DSC03523.jpg

215/35/18 on a 9.5 rim.. Might be a 10" Tell the tyre guy to stop being a pussy wack the 205 on the 8 inch and run around until they die..

dam now thats stretched... just tell the tyre shop that you drift it and that youll spend crap loads of money if they look after you... :laugh:

they will fit, just depends on what hieght the side wall is to whether or not you be pushin it... lower than 40 and then its running a bit low...

Edited by yld:18e

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

    • It's interesting seeing everyone talk about what level of risk they are happy to tolerate.  Building a GTR always has a level of risk, you could be that lucky guy that drops 20k on the engine build alone and still has the thing go pop on the dyno. Life is fun like that.  The way I see it, the thing is a toy to be enjoyed. I'd be happy to turn up the power on stock motor and limit the risk with sensible tuning and engine protection. If it still goes pop, it is what it is. The car isn't a daily driver so it can happily sit while a plan is made to sort it out.  Given this thing will be a street car only, I really feel it's worth the (relatively small if managed well) risk to turn the power up to around 350KW on e85.  I don't think anyone getting into the skyline game now is doing it out of logic. Surely it is a purely emotional decision so I'm not sure how important it is to think about the engine build logically. The heart wants what it wants.  @joshuaho96 little note for Josh, I run my 525 pump flat out all the time and through the factory lines without any issues. (excluding the melting connectors, that's sorted now. we'll pretend it never happened lol)
    • But the Nexus S3 is very expensive and won't be as purpose-built for the application as a separate electronic boost controller :^) More seriously my pet issue here would be that the Walbro 525 running at 100% duty cycle is going to require more FPR than the stock setup can handle. I'm also pretty sure from what I've seen elsewhere you might want to slow down the pump regardless unless you're going to come up with some way of upsizing the fuel lines coming from the fuel tank. Factory 8mm fuel line doesn't actually flow very much if you want to keep pressure drop down between the fuel pump outlet and FPR. If you really want to "keep it simple" I would run only as much pump as you need and source a fuel pump controller to slow down the pump in the vain hope of being able to run stock-style FPRs which are pretty dinky. Or just use the HICAS lines and it should be mostly fine. OP should also really think hard about what profile they'd want out of the turbo. My pet choice here would be the G1 profile rather than anything higher power but YMMV. I already think ~stock turbo lag is pretty bad so I don't want to make it worse. In "gentle canyon cruising" I found that I spent a lot of time around 4-4.5k RPM. I also recommend DIYing labor if you're detail-oriented enough. Costs are high for labor + if you do it yourself you can be your own quality control.
    • GTSBoy is again on the money. My actual advice? Sell the car. (really). For what it's worth as is, you can sidegrade into something much better. If you care about function then this is the actual move. If you want a Skyline to perform, set aside about $100K to do it. This is NOT a typo. You will see right away these are two very different mindsets. Realistically we're talking full restomod for any Skyline still kicking around. Have an honest think about which one you are.. and what you want to do, and how much you want to invest in this (with no return).
    • I promise there will be no chance of replacing the rad support....  It is barely twisted and it's way more likely to just be driven around with a slightly twisty support. As long as the headlight can be bolted in there then no harm no foul lol. The reo may need to be un-bent a little but truth be told if it all somewhat lines up and is hidden when the car is assembled the level of f**ks will be 0.0 
    • this thread delivers, once again Skyline owners, our cars spend more time off the road than on the road  
×
×
  • Create New...