6thgenaccord Staggered Wheels Poll

Staggered Wheels for 6thgens


  • Total voters
    56

sodaks2k

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2009
Posts
760
Reaction score
5
Location
Omaha
Having staggered fitment means you cannot rotate the tires around without swaping the tires rims to rim which would mean you have to pay someone to remount and balance your tires everytime you rotate them, or you do not rotate them and then they wearout quickly, very quickly on the fronts.

Unless he doesn't care if the wider wheels/tires are on the front and the skinnier on the rear when he rotates them and vice versa. And he can do side to side unless they're rotational tires.
 

Fuzz

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2008
Posts
426
Reaction score
9
Location
Kirkland, Quebec
technically staggered wheels on a fwd drive car is actually functional. On a track or taking turns at high speeds in a fwd car the back wheels kind of... skid (i would say) a bit... because there is really no drive train giving them a direction to go... the staggered wheels at the back put more of the tires surface area on the ground giving it less of that "skid" in high turns so its not necessarily "not functional"

I think you have it mixed up.

A lot of FWD Racing Staggered Setups are you have the larger tires in the front. For instance, running R-Compound tires the guys in the racing civics here run 275 - 285 in the front, and 225 in the rear.

With the proper suspension setup you don't ever have to worry about overr-steer unless you actually want to, which you CAN with the proper setup as well. This is what rear-camber prevents especially. But your rear tires only direction is ever following... the direction doesn't change unless you installed some HICAS lol.
 

nyknick1015

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 28, 2007
Posts
3,739
Reaction score
3
Location
NYC
I think you have it mixed up.

A lot of FWD Racing Staggered Setups are you have the larger tires in the front. For instance, running R-Compound tires the guys in the racing civics here run 275 - 285 in the front, and 225 in the rear.

With the proper suspension setup you don't ever have to worry about overr-steer unless you actually want to, which you CAN with the proper setup as well. This is what rear-camber prevents especially. But your rear tires only direction is ever following... the direction doesn't change unless you installed some HICAS lol.

yea but you mostly find a staggered stance like that in drag cars where the front is bigger than rear... you will never find a 285 front and 225 rear on a track car. Its gonna mess up the whole flow of the car turning and cornering... drag cars, all you have to do is go straight.

and i do understand what you mean by with proper suspension you don't have to worry about that but a wider rear tire can prevent unnecessary power slides especially in a FWD car. more tire surface area means more grip where needed and with out a drive train on the rear mean its where ever the rest of the car takes you is where you go. A lot of times racers don't worry about that because it just makes more sense to put the same tire width all around. or have HICAS which i do agree

for all you fwd, take a turn at a high speed, you can feel the front hugging, but me, i know my rear is always a bit loose in turns..
 

Fuzz

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2008
Posts
426
Reaction score
9
Location
Kirkland, Quebec
you will never find a 285 front and 225 rear on a track car. Its gonna mess up the whole flow of the car turning and cornering...

No... I AM Talking about Track / Road Racing / Lapping. I hate drag lol. The tires are all about traction.

The guy that won the championship the last 2 years in a row had that setup on his civic. You want the widest tire possible on your drive wheels so that you can put the power down without having wheel spin.

A lot of the Integra and RSX Race Cars here have 255/245 in the front and 225 in the rear also.

Remember, we're talking race prepped cars with R-Compounds. This year a lot of the guys are actually using RACE Tires, which are 10 times more traction than R-Compounds, and they are going with square setups... 8.5" front and back.
 
Last edited:

Sketch o5

'Tis I
Joined
Sep 6, 2005
Posts
26,554
Reaction score
228
Location
░▒▓▒░▒▓▒░
a 225 tire and some camber in the rear is def enough grip to rip corners on a smaller lighter car...like rsx's, civic's, and such. why have a bigger tire and wheel when its basically just adding more weight......from the track perspective.

you can bet your *** once i get the wheels i want, theyre gonna be staggered haha....wider in the rear.
 

BlkCurrantKord

Super Moderator
Joined
Sep 7, 2005
Posts
10,198
Reaction score
141
Location
Ohio
I hate to burst your guys bubble about this whole "wider in the rear is better on a FWD setup" but Fuzz is right. Unless you're just doing it for looks.

Again I must reference this video of the TypeR - *Note the tire sizes Front and Rear.

225/45/16 - Front
195/55/15 - Rear

It's about making the car rotate and drive. Not how it looks. Go watch an AutoX or track event and see how people have their FWD cars setup.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXbwO9Mb2zo - Pay close attention to the last 20 sec of so the vid.
 
Last edited:

bdeitemeyer

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 7, 2008
Posts
1,270
Reaction score
4
Location
...
I don't think the OP cares about track specs for a staggered setup, he's interested in a staggered setup for looks alone.
 

iHazSnail

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2008
Posts
3,409
Reaction score
7
Location
NY
Like someone had said previously, it would look good if done right. I am all about it myself.
 

blacknight

Superman, uh mod
Joined
Sep 7, 2005
Posts
6,708
Reaction score
22
Location
Bergen County, NJ
I don't think the OP cares about track specs for a staggered setup, he's interested in a staggered setup for looks alone.

If he's only interested in looks, he can go for it.
But for per formance, don't bother.


ALso remember, when taking a turn in a FWD car the rear will unlikely get out of line because the Front wheels are pulling it. It may be possible but highly unlikely.
It's more likely that a RWD car going into a turn will get the rear loose because of the drive wheels. That's why the rear tires should be wider because they are the drive wheels
 
Back
Top