6G Celicas Forums

Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

 
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> rough ride
post Jul 14, 2006 - 12:01 AM
+Quote Post
cg97



Enthusiast
*
Joined Nov 30, '05
From British Columbia, Canada
Currently Offline

Reputation: 1 (100%)




hey guys

ive been noticing in my car, that when i go over, say, a rough road, bumps and such, they really control my car. as in, the steering wheel jerks and stuff, not like im out of control but u definatly gotta hold the wheel i bit firmer. is that because of the 17's and my tires? or is something wrong?

thanks


--------------------
IPB Image
post Jul 14, 2006 - 12:11 AM
+Quote Post
j0e_p3t



Enthusiast
*****
Joined Dec 8, '05
From torrance/carson, ca
Currently Offline

Reputation: 11 (100%)




i guess that sounds normal. low profile tires and bad roads don't mix. just try to slow it down a lil if you know its gonna be rough.


--------------------
IPB Image
ss-iii splitters and 404 skirts are on. which means i need to update my sig.
post Jul 14, 2006 - 12:14 AM
+Quote Post
brthrurik

Enthusiast
**
Joined Mar 24, '06
From Aloha, Oregon
Currently Offline

Reputation: 5 (100%)




i hate to say it, but bad roads and our cars don't mix very well. Even on stock wheel/tire size rough roads can be bad. If it gets really bad you may need new shocks/struts.
post Jul 14, 2006 - 12:33 AM
+Quote Post
cg97



Enthusiast
*
Joined Nov 30, '05
From British Columbia, Canada
Currently Offline

Reputation: 1 (100%)




QUOTE(brthrurik @ Jul 14, 2006 - 12:14 AM) [snapback]455967[/snapback]

i hate to say it, but bad roads and our cars don't mix very well. Even on stock wheel/tire size rough roads can be bad. If it gets really bad you may need new shocks/struts.


ive got kybs and s-techs going in real quick, i was just wondering if i need to fix something else while im down there.


--------------------
IPB Image
post Jul 14, 2006 - 10:03 PM
+Quote Post
brthrurik

Enthusiast
**
Joined Mar 24, '06
From Aloha, Oregon
Currently Offline

Reputation: 5 (100%)




QUOTE(cg97 @ Jul 13, 2006 - 10:33 PM) [snapback]455985[/snapback]

[

ive got kybs and s-techs going in real quick, i was just wondering if i need to fix something else while im down there.


in that case you will still feel it but in a good way biggrin.gif
post Jul 14, 2006 - 10:06 PM
+Quote Post
LewFX



Enthusiast
*****
Joined Jan 28, '05
From Redondo Beach, CA
Currently Offline

Reputation: 86 (100%)




new suspension arms, new links, bigger sways, etc wouldnt hurt


--------------------
IPB Image
post Jul 15, 2006 - 1:09 PM
+Quote Post
soulshadow



Enthusiast
*****
Joined Apr 18, '05
From Lincoln, Ar
Currently Offline

Reputation: 7 (100%)




Its the tire sizes, if your using 215/40/17 they tend to control ur car when u go over bumps and what not. Try switchin over to 205/45/17 the next time u get new tires. The 45 has an extra height of 5".
post Jul 16, 2006 - 1:08 PM
+Quote Post
hashmaster52

Enthusiast
*
Joined Dec 3, '05
From San Jose, CA
Currently Offline

Reputation: 0 (0%)




QUOTE(cg97 @ Jul 14, 2006 - 12:01 AM) [snapback]455957[/snapback]

hey guys

ive been noticing in my car, that when i go over, say, a rough road, bumps and such, they really control my car. as in, the steering wheel jerks and stuff, not like im out of control but u definatly gotta hold the wheel i bit firmer. is that because of the 17's and my tires? or is something wrong?

thanks


the same thing happens to me. i noticed it after my new rims too. i got 215/45/17, so i dont think the 45 helps much. thats just my experience.
post Jul 16, 2006 - 2:05 PM
+Quote Post
playr158



Enthusiast
*****
Joined May 22, '03
From NOVA
Currently Offline

Reputation: 16 (100%)




QUOTE(soulshadow @ Jul 15, 2006 - 2:09 PM) [snapback]456517[/snapback]

Its the tire sizes, if your using 215/40/17 they tend to control ur car when u go over bumps and what not. Try switchin over to 205/45/17 the next time u get new tires. The 45 has an extra height of 5".


this is crap advise....

a 45 series tire wall DOES NOT have and extra 5 inches of sidewall...

stick with a 215/40/17 its a perfectly fine tire (a 205/40/17) won't hurt either
personally i used a 35 series on my 17s and my 18s
the push and pull on your steering wheel your experiencing means your going too fast over something enough to make wat ever you hit push the car...slow down before you break something..
post Jul 16, 2006 - 3:03 PM
+Quote Post
hashmaster52

Enthusiast
*
Joined Dec 3, '05
From San Jose, CA
Currently Offline

Reputation: 0 (0%)




QUOTE(playr158 @ Jul 16, 2006 - 2:05 PM) [snapback]456869[/snapback]

QUOTE(soulshadow @ Jul 15, 2006 - 2:09 PM) [snapback]456517[/snapback]

Its the tire sizes, if your using 215/40/17 they tend to control ur car when u go over bumps and what not. Try switchin over to 205/45/17 the next time u get new tires. The 45 has an extra height of 5".


this is crap advise....

a 45 series tire wall DOES NOT have and extra 5 inches of sidewall...

stick with a 215/40/17 its a perfectly fine tire (a 205/40/17) won't hurt either
personally i used a 35 series on my 17s and my 18s
the push and pull on your steering wheel your experiencing means your going too fast over something enough to make wat ever you hit push the car...slow down before you break something..


it happens while driving normally. could it be becuz of no hubcentric rings?

This post has been edited by hashmaster52: Jul 16, 2006 - 3:04 PM
post Jul 17, 2006 - 1:39 AM
+Quote Post
playr158



Enthusiast
*****
Joined May 22, '03
From NOVA
Currently Offline

Reputation: 16 (100%)




this action will not be cause by non hub centric rings...hub centric rings are needed when using wheels (other then stock) whose center piece is larger then the stock..this causes a vibration in the wheel (i'm not completely sure why i don't have a full understanding of this reason)
but using hub centric rings solves a vibration issue not a push/pull issue

push/pull is a external force of the car...IE you run into a curb which will push you back the other direction once you've hit it...or larger bumps which bounce the car back and worth jerking your wheel...its a matter of driving style

Reply to this topicStart new topic
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 



Lo-Fi Version Time is now: February 17th, 2025 - 12:38 AM