What tyre size dilemma
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Discussion

300bhp/ton

Original Poster:

41,030 posts

211 months

Wednesday 2nd November 2011
quotequote all
Got something to ponder here.

The car has 205/70R14 tyres on it at present. An odd size to say the least.

Optional tyres of the era for it were 215/70R14 or 225/60R15's.

Again all rather odd sizes.

The main issue here is, such sizes mean the tyres are 25.30 - 25.85" tall.


I'm quite happy to change rim size and I'd also like something a bit more chunky than a 205. The hub is actually a fairly common PCD of 4 x 108 with a centre bore of 63.3, these are the same as a Ford Fiesta, Puma, Focus MK1, Escort and so on.


I'd happily opt for 15, 16 or 17" rims. Maybe even 18's if it worked out better, although not sure I like the rubber band look.

But I'd like to try and preserve rolling radius.


So what would you opt for?

falkster

4,258 posts

224 months

Wednesday 2nd November 2011
quotequote all
Which car is it for mate?

300bhp/ton

Original Poster:

41,030 posts

211 months

Wednesday 2nd November 2011
quotequote all
falkster said:
Which car is it for mate?
1986 T-Bird. Currently has pepper pot 14" alloys on it (standard alloy for them). I believe they are the same rim as found on a Fiesta of similar vintage. The main difference is the tyre diameter. I think if I drop down on the tyre size the arches will look empty.

falkster

4,258 posts

224 months

Wednesday 2nd November 2011
quotequote all
300bhp/ton said:
1986 T-Bird. Currently has pepper pot 14" alloys on it (standard alloy for them). I believe they are the same rim as found on a Fiesta of similar vintage. The main difference is the tyre diameter. I think if I drop down on the tyre size the arches will look empty.
The pepper pots on fiestas are 13" though.
I think with it being an old car anything too big would look daft. What about some 15" Ford alloys?

j44esd

1,237 posts

244 months

Wednesday 2nd November 2011
quotequote all
OP - PM me your address, and I will send you a book that covers all the conversion sizes - so within the ETRTO specs you can see what other tyres are a possible match. Hope that helps! smile

falkster

4,258 posts

224 months

parapaul

2,828 posts

219 months

Thursday 3rd November 2011
quotequote all
Based on the original 205/70R14 size:


Tyre code Diameter Circumference Difference
---------- -------- ------------- ----------
205/60 R15 627 mm 1970 mm -2.43 %
215/60 R15 639 mm 2007 mm -0.56 %
225/60 R15 651 mm 2045 mm 1.31 %
205/65 R15 648 mm 2036 mm 0.76 %
205/60 R16 652 mm 2048 mm 1.53 %

JR

13,985 posts

279 months

Thursday 3rd November 2011
quotequote all
falkster said:
Good shout. I'd go for the near universal 205/55/16 for great choice availability and value. 225/55/16 or 225/50/16 would be fine also.

j44esd

1,237 posts

244 months

Thursday 3rd November 2011
quotequote all
JR said:
falkster said:
Good shout. I'd go for the near universal 205/55/16 for great choice availability and value. 225/55/16 or 225/50/16 would be fine also.
205/55 R16 seems a good suggestion - it is at the maximum tolerance by ETRTO specs at -2% diameter (A 205/70 R14 books at 655mm overall diameter, so you can go to 640mm (Down 2%) or to 665mm (Up 1.5%)), but as stated it will open up a good selection of tyres at a good price - 205/55 R16 is the most popular size in the country - just make sure that the load/speed index is correct for the vehicle as well!

300bhp/ton

Original Poster:

41,030 posts

211 months

Thursday 3rd November 2011
quotequote all
j44esd said:
205/55 R16 seems a good suggestion - it is at the maximum tolerance by ETRTO specs at -2% diameter (A 205/70 R14 books at 655mm overall diameter, so you can go to 640mm (Down 2%) or to 665mm (Up 1.5%)), but as stated it will open up a good selection of tyres at a good price - 205/55 R16 is the most popular size in the country - just make sure that the load/speed index is correct for the vehicle as well!
Thanks.

About 3/4" shorter.

Seems there's a fairly good choice of 225/60R16's too