xjwest
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- folsom, ca(home) FT. HOOD, TX(ARMY)
is this too wide for off roading? also for the components of the dana 30?
i dont think it would be putting too much strain on the axle, spacers would be putting more strain on it than a wheel with lower backspacing.
That's retarded. A 3.75" backspace wheel plus a 1" spacer is exactly the same on the wheel bearings and ball joints as a 2.75" backspace wheel.
I run 3.25" backspaced 15x8s on 35x12.5s. It's fine. 2.75 should be fine also.
well, ktmracer seems to agree with me at least somewhat? i would think that it IS different than having a differently backspaced wheel because you are moving the mounting surface of the wheel further away from the unit bearing, therefore putting more leverage and strain on the hub itself.
or, maybe :wstupid: considering the retard comment, i guess thats the case :dunno:
i still disagree, but will agree to disagree to avoid a flamefest within the thread
Alright. Well, this is difficult without some sort of drawing/diagram... But I would think that spacing the mounting surface away from the hub puts more leverage on the hub, regardless of the backspacing you have. Let's say you hit a bump, as an easy example... rather than the energy being transferred upwards through the wheel, and the mounting surface being flush and immediately next to the hub, as it would without a wheel spacer, the energy will travel diagonally, and in a way "pull" on the hub? Ahh, I'm so terrible with words... I'm hoping someone else out there who is better with wording things and agrees with me, or knows what I'm trying to say, can jump in and help me out here... In the meantime I'll try and figure out what the hell it is I'm trying to say!
hey guys i appreciate the help, does anyone have any pics with a wheel the has less than 3 inches of backspacing?
Its all the same leaverage... The further out the tire the more leaverage no matter if its 4"bs with 1" spacer or 3" bs and no spacer. Really I thought this was all settled like 500 threads ago.well, ktmracer seems to agree with me at least somewhat? i would think that it IS different than having a differently backspaced wheel because you are moving the mounting surface of the wheel further away from the unit bearing, therefore putting more leverage and strain on the hub itself.
or, maybe :wstupid: considering the retard comment, i guess thats the case :dunno: