- Location
- San Bruno, CA.
I would never run steel wheels on any vechile that I was going to be running off road!
2XJes said:I would never run steel wheels on any vechile that I was going to be running off road!
XJEEPER said:The fact that you can bend a steel wheel is why I run aluminum. Pounding out a bent lip is nice, but how easy is it to straighten a steel wheel that is bent at the wheel center? I see this all the time, especially on the cheap steel "RockCrawler" rims.
On a trailered rig, I'd be inclined to go with steel, but on a daily driver that sees regular trail time, aluminum.
Two words.......SA WEEEEEEET!!!!Mosephus said:Ditto, on the aluminum, this one doesn't look too beat but there are chunks missing and rash everywhere, sure you hit it hard enough it will crack but what wheel won't if hit hard enough. Besides you can spray paint Aluminuim wheels too:spin1:
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TunaSoda said:Steel wheels are very cheap to replace/fix and you can torque your lugs harder without worrying about flaring your mounting flange holes. They also don't oxidize/discolor/pit from the winter months as easy.
I'm saying you have less to worry about if you over-tighten the lugs by hand (without a T-Wrench)Jes said:So, you're saying by running steel wheels that somehow I can exceed the 85 ft/lb torque spec on the lug nuts?
Sweet.