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How Did You Decide On A New Tire/wheel Setup?, The amount of choices out there is dizzying! |
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Oct 30 2009, 07:12 PM
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Newbie
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Member No.: 75,874
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Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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I have an '07 Accent 2-door hatchback with the stock 14" steel wheel configuration. Looking ahead, I know that I will want to swap them out for something a bit more sporty. My question is how do I go about deciding which tire and wheel combination works best? I'm sure there are lots of combos that will fit. Heck, I could even fit 12" wheels on the car if I really wanted to. (IMG: style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif) I can't imagine that "because it looks cool" is the number one deciding factor. What are the technical deciding factors? I am looking for something that is lighter than stock and helps with cornering. I understand that I will need a stiffer suspension setup too but I'm focusing on the tires and wheels. From a quick glance (and I will look more here shortly), it seems that 205/40/R17 is the largest and widest tire and wheel combo that can fit on the Accent without rubbing or bottoming out the car. My budget will be $1000 and not a penny over. I know it's possible to get some combo packages for less but I want to allocate some extra in order to get something that can survive wet and snowy weather, not crack after 10k miles, and not wear out too soon. My Accent is Sapphire Blue. Any recommendations? -- Boris (BTW, the sticky post in the tires section of the forum has a link to a Popular Mechanics article. The link doesn't work.)
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Oct 30 2009, 08:16 PM
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 24
Joined: 21-October 09
Member No.: 75,874
Status: 
Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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Does the 15" setup have a technical advantage over the 17" setup? Or does the 15" win out simply because of the wider selection of tires?
-- Boris
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Oct 30 2009, 10:05 PM
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Newbie
Group: Members
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Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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I'm not worried about any weight difference between 15" and 17" aftermarket wheels. Both will probably be significantly lighter than the stock steel setup coming out of the factory.
This may be a misunderstanding on my part here but I always thought that narrow profile 17" tires would corner better and offer better grip due to the sidewalls being stiffer than a 15" tire with the same outer diameter and width.
I also read that the wheels have to have an offset of 40mm to 47mm but it seems that almost every aftermarket wheel has this feature.
As far as looks go... well, I don't want something ugly or mismatching but I'm pretty flexible with style.
-- Boris
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Oct 31 2009, 01:51 PM
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 24
Joined: 21-October 09
Member No.: 75,874
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Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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Assuming that the effective diameter of the tires will be about the same, is the weight between a 15" and 17" setup big enough to make a noticeable and measurable impact?
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Nov 5 2009, 11:30 AM
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Newbie
Group: Members
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Joined: 22-October 09
Member No.: 75,895
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Location: Canada
Drives: Hyundai Accent SE Hatchback

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QUOTE (Powered by PopTarts @ Oct 30 2009, 08:12 PM)  I have an '07 Accent 2-door hatchback with the stock 14" steel wheel configuration. Looking ahead, I know that I will want to swap them out for something a bit more sporty. My question is how do I go about deciding which tire and wheel combination works best? I'm sure there are lots of combos that will fit. Heck, I could even fit 12" wheels on the car if I really wanted to. (IMG: style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif) I can't imagine that "because it looks cool" is the number one deciding factor. What are the technical deciding factors? I am looking for something that is lighter than stock and helps with cornering. I understand that I will need a stiffer suspension setup too but I'm focusing on the tires and wheels. From a quick glance (and I will look more here shortly), it seems that 205/40/R17 is the largest and widest tire and wheel combo that can fit on the Accent without rubbing or bottoming out the car. My budget will be $1000 and not a penny over. I know it's possible to get some combo packages for less but I want to allocate some extra in order to get something that can survive wet and snowy weather, not crack after 10k miles, and not wear out too soon. My Accent is Sapphire Blue. Any recommendations? -- Boris (BTW, the sticky post in the tires section of the forum has a link to a Popular Mechanics article. The link doesn't work.) Im looking to go from a 16" tire to a 14" tire for the winter. What size 14" tires came stock with your Accent?
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Nov 5 2009, 12:20 PM
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 24
Joined: 21-October 09
Member No.: 75,874
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Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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The stock tires on my Accent are Kumho Solus HP4. Here's a link from tirerack.com. I hope the link works. http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tires.jsp?ti...mp;autoModClar=
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Nov 5 2009, 04:29 PM
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Full Member
 
Group: Members
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Joined: 3-August 09
Member No.: 69,552
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Location: VA, USA
Drives: 09 Accent SE 1.6 5MT

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QUOTE (Powered by PopTarts @ Oct 31 2009, 01:51 PM)  Assuming that the effective diameter of the tires will be about the same, is the weight between a 15" and 17" setup big enough to make a noticeable and measurable impact? Considering the car likely only has a horsepower output at the wheels around 90-100, yes, weight makes a pretty big difference. I experienced the same thing with one of my last cars, I went from ~13lb wheels to a set of ~15lb wheels, the car rode rougher and accellerated slower. I swapped out the stock 16x6.5" (~18lb) accent wheels for a set of 15x7" (~14.5 lb) wheels with summer tires, braking is noticably more responsive, acceleration I think was a wash because I opted to go with a slightly smaller diameter tire. most handling improvements are due to my tire choice so its not really fair for me to say that improvement was because of the wheels. FYI I chose 40 offset and it sits pretty flush with the fenders. There are a few 15" options in the 10-12lb range for a reasonable price, and some less than 10lbs for more. Enkei RPF1, Falken Hanabi, 949 Racing 6UL, tons of other choices... Here are a lot of lightweight choices here in the 15-17" range, most of these should fit an Accent. http://www.good-win-racing.com/Mazda-Perfo...res/Wheels.htmlSome light reading on why light wheels are good. http://www.good-win-racing.com/Mazda-Perfo...tml?id=HkzYICy415 and 17 offer a very wide choice of tires so you cant really go wrong with either.
This post has been edited by omg grip: Nov 5 2009, 04:33 PM
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Nov 5 2009, 11:00 PM
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 24
Joined: 21-October 09
Member No.: 75,874
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Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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I tried looking up the weight of my current wheels and I found this. http://www.miata.net/faq/wheel_weights.htmlIt's a list of wheel weights for a Mazda Miata but the first entry is for a 14" steel wheel. Can I assume that my 14" steel wheel weighs about the same?
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Nov 6 2009, 07:50 AM
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 24
Joined: 21-October 09
Member No.: 75,874
Status: 
Location: Northern Nevada, USA
Drives: 2007 Hyundai Accent GS

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10 years ago I bought a single steel rim from the local junkyard so I can have a full size spare. I think the steel wheel cost me $25. Nowadays the price would probably be higher but I'm sure you could probably get a deal for $100 or less for 4 steel wheels.
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