Originally posted by cardnation
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16x8 "style 5?" rims. Redrill or adapters?
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Originally posted by PNWDan View PostYou already have to run a spacer to clear the calipers. Removing material will do nothing but require more spacer. At et23 these fit well with adapters. I run my filled and drilled 17's with 10mm up front and 20mm in the rear. They are et20 originally
Shaving metal would increase the offset. Hence ET23 with 18mm adapters would equate to a +5 offset which as mentioned before leaves little room for tire/camber options. Shaving a few mm of metal would bump that up to +8 to +10, which is much more manageable..
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One of you is taking about a fill n drill with spacers, the other is talking about adapters.
I talked to someone about shaving metal off the inside hub, and I was told that it decreases the strength greatly with every mm, and if it come down to that I should not be tunning the wheels.
I say you fill n drill. Best option period. If you want to run adapters. Go ahead, just pull/roll your fenders for a little more tire options.
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Originally posted by cardnation View PostNot the same thing, 18mm is the smaller adapter available, you run 10mm up front which is not an option with adapters.
Shaving metal would increase the offset. Hence ET23 with 18mm adapters would equate to a +5 offset which as mentioned before leaves little room for tire/camber options. Shaving a few mm of metal would bump that up to +8 to +10, which is much more manageable.
I see what your saying however I doubt you can remove more than 2-3mm without messing up the integrity of the wheel.
Most are running the 18mm adapters with zero issue
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Originally posted by 8380 Labs View PostLast edited by tk-421; 07-04-2012, 03:58 PM.1990 E30 325i sedan - Gletscherblau (280) over Indigo cloth (0271)
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just gonna leave this here...
a good explanation of why you should be buying these adapters:
OEM 5-lug style 5's are the most popular example of a wide range of stock BMW (and other manufacturers') wheels that people like to run on 4-lug e30s.
as i see it, there are several factors that must be taken into account when considering a modification like running 5-lug wheels on a 4-lug car:
1) what are the available options?
- full 5-lug suspension swap, redrill or adapters
2) are you planning on driving the car on the track or the street?
- i would not recommend adapters or a redrill for track applications
3) what is your budget?
- if we're talking about running a set of wheels for purely aesthetic purposes on a street car, only two of these options make sense from a budget/effort standpoint, and that would be a redrill or adapters.
4) which option will fit the best?
- let's say you were hell bent on a 5-lug swap. unless you're planning on purchasing a $1,500+ e30 m3 setup, a hacked together e36/z3/whatever setup is going to totally bugger the geometry (especially the front castor) those german engineers worked so hard to perfect. an e36/etc 5-lug swap also widens the track significantly, so your 5-lug wheels now bolt up directly, but fit the same way as they would with $400 adapters - except you spent way more money and effort to get there. also, if you want to change wheels it's much harder to reverse a 5-lug swap.
- fill and drill will allow you to retain the stock offsets, but you'll most likely end up needing to buy spacers to get the wheels to sit properly in the fenders - there's another $150+ on top of the $300+ you spent on the redrill...if you can find a place who will touch that project.
- we've sold quite a few sets of 18mm 4x100 > 5x120 adapters to e30 guys running style 5s and other 5-lug wheels - there are a bunch of pics and reviews in this thread...people are realizing the degree to which this 4-to-5-lug design has opened up their wheel options.
5) which option is the safest?
- if you've ever seen a 4x100 redrilled style 5 wheel, you'll know that to do that they must machine into the centerbore of the wheels. i personally wouldn't want to run those on my car, and it's the same reason many machinists will refuse to do the work. i know there are people out there who have run redrilled wheels safely, but if there's a price-competitive option that's more readily available and less of a safety gamble, i'd go that route, personally.
- a considerable amount of time was put into the research and development of this product line, and the result is a 4-to-5 lug adapter design that is revolutionary. i've been using adapters in some form or another for about 8 years now, and these are the best i've ever seen.
- from the modular hubcentric rings, to the use of studs (which makes installs much easier) and the design of the kidney-shaped adapter plate, which means no moving parts (compared to all other 4-to-5-lug adapter designs) - these are by far the best designed/built and safest adapters on the market, and the best choice if you want to quickly/easily/cheaply/safely run 5-lug wheels on your 4-lug car.
let me know if you have any questions, thanks.
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That is how they work, tighten them down back them off as needed. You can try different ones on different hubs and get them closer where you don't need to loosen them as much.
You might want to add a little grease or anti seize on them to make the adapter come off them easier in the future.
Also keep an eye on the threaded holes for the lug bolts, I ended up drilling/tapping and adding helicoils as the threads were failing. They really should come with studs and not lug bolts.Last edited by whodwho; 07-07-2012, 04:25 PM.
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