TYRE Size options for E46 M3 !?
TYRE Size options for E46 M3 !?
Author
Discussion

SLINC

Original Poster:

106 posts

222 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
Hi all,

Thinking of changing my tyres but there's a LOT of differing opinion about what's best (inc this forum).
I'm considering Michelin Super Sports as they have so much positive feedback from owners.

Wheels (19" genuine CSL type) will remain, ie
F = 8.5"
R = 9.5"

Current tyres are OEM (but for regular E46 M3) :
F = 225/40/19
R = 255/35/19

I've read it's important to keep the rolling radius as close as poss between F & R - the stock setup above is only 5mm diff.

Would like wider Fronts, so options (with no rubbing issues etc) appear to be
F = 235/35/19 or 245/35/19.

The best staggered Rears (to keep rolling radius closest ) is
R = 275/30/19.

(This gives a rr diff of just 2mm for the 235 but 20mm for the 245!)




To add to my confusion many people reckon the 265/30 is a better rear choice to go with a 235/35 front (as this was apparently the OEM spec for the CSL ?), 245 fronts tramline to much, DSC kicks in obtrusively if rr diff is too large etc etc....




So, PLEASE give me any advice or share experiences with your current set-up!!

Many thanks,
SLINC

jon-

16,534 posts

242 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
235/35 is wide enough on the front wheel anyway, is unlikely to give you more grip, just more roll.

I'm not sure what the problem is with the 255/35 rear. Just makes the car more fun to drive wink Mine is on 235/35 Pilot Sport fronts and 255/35 Rainsport 2 rears, with the CSL geo, and there's still a hint of understeer. But then I do like a very sharp front, so might not be typical.

235/35 and 255/35 will give you the widest range of tyres to choose from.

E30M3SE

8,491 posts

222 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
235/35 and 265/30 is the OEM size for the Michelin Pilot Cups fitted to CSL's.

If you opted to spec yoor new CSL with 'normal' tyres you got the standard 19' M3 diamond cut wheels (I forget the style no.) and 225 and 255 sized tyres.

The sizes used for the CSL is more to do with the sizes the Cup's are available in, there don't make a 225 in 19' only 18' or a 255 period.

Edited by E30M3SE on Thursday 18th October 17:54

SLINC

Original Poster:

106 posts

222 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
jon- said:
235/35 is wide enough on the front wheel anyway, is unlikely to give you more grip, just more roll.

I'm not sure what the problem is with the 255/35 rear. Just makes the car more fun to drive wink Mine is on 235/35 Pilot Sport fronts and 255/35 Rainsport 2 rears, with the CSL geo, and there's still a hint of understeer. But then I do like a very sharp front, so might not be typical.

235/35 and 255/35 will give you the widest range of tyres to choose from.
Thanks for the reply Jon!
The only one on 2 websites!!

On the sizes you run the rolling radii are 203.3cm and 207.7cm respectively.

So a 44mm difference between F & R, compared to the OEM difference of just 5mm !

Doesn't this affect the DSC - making it more intrusive ??

SLINC

Leins

10,322 posts

174 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
I'm currently running 235/35 - 255/35 on my CSL without issue

SLINC

Original Poster:

106 posts

222 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
E30M3SE said:
235/35 and 265/30 is the OEM size for the Michelin Pilot Cups fitted to CSL's.
Are those CSL OEM tyre sizes for 19" wheels (8.5"F and 9.5"R)?

Leins

10,322 posts

174 months

Thursday 18th October 2012
quotequote all
SLINC said:
Are those CSL OEM tyre sizes for 19" wheels (8.5"F and 9.5"R)?
Yes

AngryApples

5,449 posts

291 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
jon- said:
235/35 is wide enough on the front wheel anyway, is unlikely to give you more grip, just more roll.

I'm not sure what the problem is with the 255/35 rear. Just makes the car more fun to drive wink Mine is on 235/35 Pilot Sport fronts and 255/35 Rainsport 2 rears, with the CSL geo, and there's still a hint of understeer. But then I do like a very sharp front, so might not be typical.

235/35 and 255/35 will give you the widest range of tyres to choose from.
Digging up an old thread, but I'm a bit curious here

I've got a standard M3 running CSL reps with 235/35/19's F and 255/35/19's rear - the rears have only just been fitted and cant remember what was on previously (had a lot of work done recently, hence the idiocy!)

Anyway, the day after fitting the rears I did the commute down the M5 and had issues with the traction control reducing power, even when in cruise control on the motorway, and especially when cornering?

Took this to a local (Exeter) BW specialist and they diagnosed wrong tyres (requiring change to 265/30/19's at rear)as all 4 wheel sensors were showing errors and they stated the chance of this was close to impossible

Yet Jon above seems to be running this combo (255/35/19 at rear) without issue?




Edited by AngryApples on Wednesday 20th March 08:47

jon-

16,534 posts

242 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
How worn are the fronts?

Since that post I've switched to a 225/40 front and the traction control is much less in your face.

AngryApples

5,449 posts

291 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
Hi,

Fronts have loads of tread

But if you have changed I guess that answers it really, thaqnks Jon

jon-

16,534 posts

242 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
Loads of people run the 235/255 setup on cutters though. TC cutting power in a straight line on cruise control is very unusual.

Leins

10,322 posts

174 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
AngryApples said:
Digging up an old thread, but I'm a bit curious here

I've got a standard M3 running CSL reps with 235/35/19's F and 255/35/19's rear - the rears have only just been fitted and cant remember what was on previously (had a lot of work done recently, hence the idiocy!)

Anyway, the day after fitting the rears I did the commute down the M5 and had issues with the traction control reducing power, even when in cruise control on the motorway, and especially when cornering?

Took this to a local (Exeter) BW specialist and they diagnosed wrong tyres (requiring change to 265/30/19's at rear)as all 4 wheel sensors were showing errors and they stated the chance of this was close to impossible

Yet Jon above seems to be running this combo (255/35/19 at rear) without issue?
What brand combination are you running front/rear? How worn are the fronts?


jon- said:
Loads of people run the 235/255 setup on cutters though. TC cutting power in a straight line on cruise control is very unusual.
Not on E46s it's not actually, had this happen on a 325ti running Bridgestone front / Dunlop rears and it made the car almost undriveable. Many others had similar problems with various brand combinations, although rolling radius differences can cause it too

Edited by Leins on Wednesday 20th March 12:18

AngryApples

5,449 posts

291 months

Wednesday 20th March 2013
quotequote all
Cheers for the feedback folks

plowy

262 posts

232 months

Sunday 31st March 2013
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For the last four years my car has run 245/275 falkens,,,no issues at all...;)

gaz1234

5,233 posts

245 months

Sunday 31st March 2013
quotequote all
dont think there is much issue with either sizes on the 19's. im running 225 f and 265 r