Increasing Gas Mileage With Taller Tires? |
Increasing Gas Mileage With Taller Tires? |
Oct 24, 2008 - 8:27 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Jan 18, '08 From Houston Currently Offline Reputation: 7 (100%) |
It always pisses me off when my car is rated 27/34 and I get 25 in the city. Buy sandals, apparently your foot is too heavy.
-------------------- QUOTE (presure2 @ Nov 6, 2010 - 6:16 AM) Via FB: fcuking awsome!!! D-man FTW! Damn D-Man - most impressive. D-Man's post should be a sticky LOL, oh boy, you can always count on D-Man for ridiculously hilarious posts. |
Oct 24, 2008 - 8:28 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined May 22, '03 From NOVA Currently Offline Reputation: 16 (100%) |
wheels are not considered unsprung weight....you consider them rotational weight. unsprung weight would only be the spring around your shock at a stand still Incorrect. Read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsprung_weight glad you linked the article i quoted read entire threads b4 clicking reply This post has been edited by playr158: Oct 24, 2008 - 8:28 AM |
Oct 24, 2008 - 5:22 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Aug 31, '02 From KC Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
Wheel size alone can not be used as an indicator of weight. It all depends on the particular design, and there are better and worse ones out there. I would bet you can find 18" wheels with low profile tires that will weigh considerably less than the same overall height/width combo in a 15 or 16" wheel.
I am pretty sure you would gain fuel mileage with taller tires in a GT, (maybe not an ST) there is plenty of power available at highway speeds, I keep thinking I need another gear. But keep in mind- if you do change, it will throw your speedometer off so you may not be able to accurately calculate the actual gains. My own mileage has dropped from a constant 29.9 mpg average to 27.5 ever since Missouri forced ethanol on us. This is what happens when you get government involved in technical/economic stuff. If I am adding 10% ethanol to the fuel and my mileage drops by 10%, I am burning the EXACT SAME amount of gasoline + the ethanol, so what have we gained in carbon emissions or oil usage reductions except to now drive up the price of food also? |
Oct 24, 2008 - 5:32 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Feb 7, '07 From Portland, Oregon Currently Offline Reputation: 67 (96%) |
But it makes us tree hugging left wing liberals out here in Oregon so happy that you're spewing corn into the environment.
CORN not CARBON -------------------- |
Oct 24, 2008 - 6:07 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Oct 23, '07 From Dallas, TX Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
Well said 97GTinKC, those are my feelings on the subject as well. Now, can anyone tell me how large of a wheel/tire diameter I can safely get into the wheel well of my Celica without any rubbing? It has not been lowered. I assume it would dependent on tire width. I will probably go with a 205 or 215 on a 16" rim. Any wider, and like people said earlier, it will negate any fuel savings.
|
Oct 25, 2008 - 11:27 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Jun 21, '08 From Naples, FL Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
|
Oct 28, 2008 - 1:11 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Aug 31, '02 From KC Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
I'm going with 215/50-16 next time in place of the 205/50-16 on there now. Probably the BF Goodrich Traction TA again.
|
Oct 28, 2008 - 1:32 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Nov 24, '06 From Kansas City Currently Offline Reputation: 2 (100%) |
touche what octane do you guys use?
|
Oct 28, 2008 - 6:10 AM |
|
Enthusiast Joined May 22, '03 From NOVA Currently Offline Reputation: 16 (100%) |
Wheel size alone can not be used as an indicator of weight. It all depends on the particular design, and there are better and worse ones out there. I would bet you can find 18" wheels with low profile tires that will weigh considerably less than the same overall height/width combo in a 15 or 16" wheel. this is very true. I can produce 18s that weight a LOT less than a set of 15s.....now tell me who on this site will put enough $ into their wheels that they'll buy $2000+ rims (alone) for some quality LTW wheels over your $1000 18" set of HP racing/AXIS ect. yes i'm being bad and assuming the OP like 90% of this car culture will buy generic wheels. |
Oct 28, 2008 - 3:21 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Feb 7, '07 From Portland, Oregon Currently Offline Reputation: 67 (96%) |
It always pisses me off when my car is rated 27/34 and I get 25 in the city. Buy sandals, apparently your foot is too heavy.See my other thread. Don't all auto ST's get similar mileage? Nope, apparently not because I average 30 mpg and I know there's not THAT much of a difference between auto/manual trans. -------------------- |
Oct 28, 2008 - 3:24 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Jun 21, '08 From Naples, FL Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
Well, that's mad annoying...I'll just have to look into commonly fuel-sapping problems, since there's obviously something wrong.
|
Oct 28, 2008 - 3:24 PM |
|
Enthusiast Joined Feb 7, '07 From Portland, Oregon Currently Offline Reputation: 67 (96%) |
Well said 97GTinKC, those are my feelings on the subject as well. Now, can anyone tell me how large of a wheel/tire diameter I can safely get into the wheel well of my Celica without any rubbing? It has not been lowered. I assume it would dependent on tire width. I will probably go with a 205 or 215 on a 16" rim. Any wider, and like people said earlier, it will negate any fuel savings. 215 is totally fine, and probably a better choice than 205. You can go up to 225 I believe w/out any concern of rubbing, and I don't believe either one will affect mileage. I'm running 215/40R17 on a manual ST and get 30 mpg on average, that's with stop and go and highway combined. -------------------- |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: November 26th, 2024 - 12:27 PM |