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Date:         Fri, 1 May 1998 11:31:52 -0700
Reply-To:     Joseph Tu <joe@GREENCASTLE.DYN.ML.ORG>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <Vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         Joseph Tu <joe@GREENCASTLE.DYN.ML.ORG>
Subject:      Re: ?Syncro tires, wheels, rotation?
Comments: To: Kevin Sullivan <ksull@WAVE.MBARI.ORG>
Comments: cc: Vanagon@VANAGON.COM
In-Reply-To:  <199805011814.LAA23544@wave.mbari.org>
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Depending upon what kind of tire and what kind of alloys you have, the only difference will be in the weight of the tire/wheel together. If the width of the wheels are the same and the offsets the same then I don't think there would be too much of a problem with using the steel wheel. The alloy wheel should be much lighter than the same size steel wheel. If the rubber is the same, there is your only weight difference. From my personal opinion I think the spare should try to be as same overall diameter as the wheels you normally run. When I rotate my tires I usually rotate the 4 that are being driven. I don't drive on my spare. Also rotating pattern will be different every time, it depends on your van's alignment, the type of tire your running, the belting in the tire, even between tires of the same brand and model there are discrepancies sometimes. I try to stay with a higher quality tire, eg. pirelli, nitto, michelin, kelly, dunlop. Also the rating on a tire is sometimes misleading, tire manufacturers have there own set guidelines and it isn't totally uniform. Driving style and the path you take every day also will determine how you rotate your tires. Say you make a lot of left turns on your way to work, then the left tires will have more flat wear and the right front ones more wear on the outside edge due to the high caster that vanagons have, believe it or not, the vans have high caster to maintain stability at high speeds. High caster however sacrifices turning ability. I also wonder about tire inflation pressures, I was thinking the other day about finding out exactly how much weight each tire is supporting on its own. Then to set the pressures according to that. Anyone know where you can weigh your car in that manner? Well I hope all this input helps.

Joe

On Fri, 1 May 1998, Kevin Sullivan wrote:

> I'm sure this has been covered before I joined the list so can > someone give me a quick rundown.All syncro related: > > 1.Can you have 4 alloys on a van and keep the same size tire on a > steel rim for spare? > > 2. Should you do a 4 or 5 tire rotation? What pattern? How often? > > 3. How many miles can one expect out of a tire on the heaviest > Vanagon, that being the Syncro Westy ( I know, there are alot of > variables in this one)? > > Thanks > > Kevin Sullivan > '87 syncro westy > Santa Cruz, CA >


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