Missing Linc'
Dedicated LVC Member
Do the center cap type deals on these wheels come out?
but the weight has to be different with a whole 1" (even if it was a 20lb difference per wheel i dont think it would matter too much with this near 2 ton beast)
Not necessarily, and rotating mass has a much greater impact on performance.
stock for stock, do you really think there will be much difference? these are not any type of "lightweight" wheel.
with all of the rotating parts including the rotor, what do you think that the difference in rotational mass will be in each corner the between the stock 17" and the 16" (also with the 1" less wheel that means you will have 1" more rubber)(yes, I know the metal weights more than the rubber)
it will be a very small percentage of change, couple that with the excess weight of the car and i say that 19 out of 20 people couldn't tell the difference, let alone make much difference on a test track(straight line, or handling through curves)
now a set of 4" wide drag lite's might be a slightly different story
The stock 16 inchers are forged and ~13lbs per wheel. It is a much lighter set-up than the 17 inchers. The rotor and caliper assembly don't add to unsprung weight.
The rotor and caliper assembly don't add to unsprung weight.
Apparently my understanding of unsprung weight isn't correct then. I always thought that any part that didn't somehow ride on the springs was considered unsprung and contributed to the unsprung weight. This would include the rotor and caliper assembly as well as various suspension and steering components.
someone skool me please.
thanks
Unsprung Weight : The weight of the various parts of a vehicle which are not carried on the springs, such as wheels, axles, and brakes.
The stock 16 inchers are forged and ~13lbs per wheel.
Do you have any actual numbers on that, or is it a guestimate?
That has always been the way thatThe way I do things is simple, rotational mass vs non-rotational. Driveshaft, gears, axles, rotors, wheels and tires. Everything else is just regular weight.
Nothing other than what Jonathon Crocker told me in 2001. Jonathon was the head suspension engineer for the LS. He used to be a suspension engineer on Michael Schumacker's team.
Nothing other than what Jonathon Crocker told me in 2001. Jonathon was the head suspension engineer for the LS. He used to be a suspension engineer on Michael Schumacker's team.