mookiebarras
Member

205/50/16
barely fit, but no problems. clearance is good all around.
the ride is great on the bumps. defintely going to go 17's in the spring with more rubber.
slammie said:I'm new here...I have a 96' 626, which I plan to swap out for MS3, maybe MS6, but deffinately leaning towards the MS3 after test driving both back to back last week. Even with the great discounts on MS6, the MS3 just seems like the better all around machine IMO. Anyway onto my question for you veterans......Is there some reason why an owner can't just buy a set of winter tires and have them put on the stock rims each winter and then remove them in the spring? Do you really need to get a new set of rims? Also, I'm assuming folks are getting steel rims to save $$. Dealer has rim (ugly alloys)/tire package (Blizzaks) for $1100 for MS6. Any answers, comments much appreciated.....I live in MN BTW so winter tire is a must. Thanks!
shark77 said:Winter tires in smaller wheel sizes perform better, and are cheaper. Plus 18s can get beat up easily.
If you look at prices, a dedicated winter tire in a 215/45/18 will run between $150-200. Whereas a 205/60/16 winter tire ranges from $65-110.
If you buy a 16in tire, you can pretty much buy a set of steel wheels or some cheap cast wheels to mount them on for $150-200 a corner.
If you go to tirerack, you can get a set of 16in steel wheels and tires for around $450 mounted/balanced + shipping. Or you can get a good quality snow tire and some alloy wheels for ~$750 + shipping.
If you go with a stock sized snow tire, you will spend >$600 on the tires and still have to have them mounted and balanced. Then next spring, you will have to pay the mounting and balancing costs again. So it just makes more sense to mount your winter tires on a a dedicated rim.
jcrystal said:Personally, I think going down to 16" with high profile tires will really spoil your fun for 6 months of the year. It won't handle nearly as well as the stock 18's, and you'll miss that for the 80% of the time the winter roads are clear. I went with 205/50x17 high performance snows for that reason....
jcrystal said:Personally, I think going down to 16" with high profile tires will really spoil your fun for 6 months of the year. It won't handle nearly as well as the stock 18's, and you'll miss that for the 80% of the time the winter roads are clear. I went with 205/50x17 high performance snows for that reason....
mookiebarras said:the 16" wheels actually give a way better ride. more rubber = better on bumps and rough roads.
its not the size of the tire, its the compound of the rubber that gives you grip. larger rims with lower profile tires just give a better look.
i am done with low profile tires. bent way too many rims, over that.
i will be getting some 17's in the spring with a bit more rubber. the stock tires dont have enough rubber for my liking. can get the same performance from a high profile tire in 17".
MM3Canuck said:TireRack does not ship to CanadaYou guys know of a place that does?
Thanks
Since when, I ordered a set of rims and tires from them about 2 years ago. Have they changed there policy?MM3Canuck said:TireRack does not ship to CanadaYou guys know of a place that does?
Thanks
MM3Canuck said:TireRack does not ship to CanadaYou guys know of a place that does?
Thanks
Hey already have the snow shoes on mine. Put a set of Michelin X-Ice 215/50r 17 . At the Tire shop they had a 16" wheel on it. I just didn't like the look. So i wen twith the 17" 50r to keep the same overall diameter..
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205/50/16
barely fit, but no problems. clearance is good all around.
the ride is great on the bumps. defintely going to go 17's in the spring with more rubber.