Will 30s fit with no lift? I need new tires and there are a brand new set of 30s down the road with rims and matching spare for 200. Much cheaper than the tire store.
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Will 30s fit with no lift? I need new tires and there are a brand new set of 30s down the road with rims and matching spare for 200. Much cheaper than the tire store.
I think they might, If I'm not wrong I think stock tires are 28. You could always lean the tire up against your jeep to see what it looks like. or maybe make a cardboard cut out.
One more part and I'll have a new Jeep
I think the regular tire size on it are supposed to be the 215-75R15. Which I believe is 27.7 or something stupid so I'm thinking the 30s would work.
I say go for it before it's gone! I think you'll be fine. Your speedometer might be a tad off, and you MIGHT experience a slight but of rubbing on full steer, but I say go for it.
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Jeep will only be driven 8 miles a day on 2 country roads and I rarely ever hit 50mph anyway as I'm usually busy looking at the fields and local wildlife. Left a message to pick them up. Thanks guys.
***** him down to 175. The spare ended up being a 31, but the tires still had knobs on them and were practically new. Should've able to resell the rims and have myself a super set of cheap tires.
Guy just called me and let me know he has an actual matching spare and another rim to throw in for free and that he would drop it off to me tomorrow. Can't beat that deal. 6 new tires for 175. Sometimes Craigslist brings you Christmas throughout the entire year.
Should fit fine unless you suspension is really sagging. I run 30s on my xj.
1993 2 door 4x4 4.0 5 speed
1997 4 door 4x2 4.0 auto RIP 6/6/2016
2000 4 door 4x2 4.0 auto
Day of Dirt Adventure
We'll see cause the shocks on this bad boy are see through.
seen 31"s on a stock xj. very little space in fender well. had some rub at full lock.
instead of a new thread: plz forgive my thread jacking. its relavent.
not sure how to formulate the question
how do you measure tire size? once it passes 225/(75)/16 tall
i have 235/75/16. iv never seen "80" once you get past 75 does it get measured differently.
like..whats the next size up from 75/16"rim?
so you look for 31/32/33 tall tires for your size rim?
Last edited by rabies; 04-07-2014 at 12:14 PM.
There is such a thing as an 80 series. Kind of rare though. I remember some Q 80s in Buckshots. But a little beyond your size they start reverting to the traditional method of measuring.
230 hp 4.3L Chevy
Built 4L60E with manual lockout
Atlas 4 speed
Griffin radiator
On board air
Warn 9.5ti on custom bumper
7.5" RE front and bastard pack rear on custom long arms
30 gal gas tank
lockers
And a bunch of other stuff
^which is? like overall heigth from ground to the top of tire?
No the number is the height of the bead to tread surface expressed as a percentage of the width. So you take the 225mm X .75 and add to the radius, 8" and multiply by 2 for diameter, or as we would say height
230 hp 4.3L Chevy
Built 4L60E with manual lockout
Atlas 4 speed
Griffin radiator
On board air
Warn 9.5ti on custom bumper
7.5" RE front and bastard pack rear on custom long arms
30 gal gas tank
lockers
And a bunch of other stuff
Just so it's clear (it took me a while to fully understand). The metric tire sizes that look like this: 235/75r16, give first the tread width in mm (235mm) followed by the sidewall height as a percentage of the tread width (75% of 235=176.25mm) then followed by the rim size in inches (15 inches). To calculate how tall they are, you need to convert the sidewall height to inches (25.4mm/inch so 176.25mm=6.94inches) then multiply this by two and add in the height of the rim to get the total tire size (6.94inches x 2)+16inches =29.88'' tall. So a 235/75r16 tire would be roughly equivalent to a tire that is 29.9 inches tall with a tread width of 9.25 inches.
uhhhm i think i understand.
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