Twitch Posted March 23, 2010 Report Posted March 23, 2010 Hi all, I am trying to get a set of rims and I am wondering what the offset is that I can push a set of rims to, and if anyone can explain a little about what offset is then that would be great. Oh and is the PCD on the Ke55 114.3 or 100? Cheers, Twitch Quote
Damo82 Posted March 25, 2010 Report Posted March 25, 2010 Stud pattern is 4x114.3 http://www.rollaclub.com/board/index.php?showtopic=15077 Quote
chestikoph1 Posted March 25, 2010 Report Posted March 25, 2010 (edited) Your offset, put simply is the amount of rim, to either the outside side or the inside of the center of the rim. So if you are running a 7 inch wide rim with a 0 offset, you would have 3 1/2 inches of rim towards the arch, and 3 1/2 inches of rim towards the diff. Hope that helps. By the way, i run 15 x 7.5 with 0 offset and they fit great with a little bit of dish. Edited March 25, 2010 by chestikoph1 Quote
Corolla6 Posted March 26, 2010 Report Posted March 26, 2010 hey sorry bit different question but will ke30-55 rims fit my ke17 coupe?? Quote
Taz_Rx Posted March 26, 2010 Report Posted March 26, 2010 hey sorry bit different question but will ke30-55 rims fit my ke17 coupe?? No. Use the search function and I'm sure you can work out why. :) Quote
styler Posted March 26, 2010 Report Posted March 26, 2010 (edited) Your offset, put simply is the amount of rim, to either the outside side or the inside of the center of the rim.So if you are running a 7 inch wide rim with a 0 offset, you would have 3 1/2 inches of rim towards the arch, and 3 1/2 inches of rim towards the diff. well almost, the offset is actually the distance from the centreline of the rim to the rim mounting face, if it is: 0 offset - the rim mounting face is in line with the centreline of the rim positive offset - the rim mounting face is from the centreline of the rim to the outside of the rim negative offset - the rim mounting face is from the centreline of the rim to the inside of the rim rim mounting face also known as hub mounting face as the two mate up... outside of rim being the side that faces the street inside of rim being the side that faces the inner wheel arch Edited March 26, 2010 by styler Quote
seabiscuit Posted March 26, 2010 Report Posted March 26, 2010 (edited) If you didn't get much of that, basically the more NEGATIVE offset you have, the more dish you have. The more positive, the less dish you have. The more negative offset, the more your wheel hub sits "inwards" on the rim. Opposite applies for positive offset. This rim has lots of positive offset (no dish! :)) This rim has LOTS of negative offset.... (lots and lots and lots and lots of fingerlicking good dish) Edited March 26, 2010 by seabiscuit Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.