FJ Cruisers of Northern California
Ok, so there are two pics attached. The white FJ is on 18" rims, and 33" tires. The brandy wine is on 20" rims, 33" tires. The other difference is the offset. The Rockstars (white FJ) are 'in' more.
Will either of these fit on my 2010 without a lift yet?
Tags:
No.
And the rockstars absolutely suck if you try to take the truck on a trail (scratch easy, and look bad with scratches)
Regardless of the rim / backspacing, 33" tires will require some trimming even with a 3" lift and pretty much forget about it with no lift.
If your short on cash and just want to get the rims and tires going I have a spacer lift you can have for free. The front spacers are a little rough so you might want to spend a few bucks and get new ones $60, they could be reused if absolutely necessary and i can help you install for free if you come out to Roseville.
I would ask the same question...which i find myself doing to often to DWHs posts.... so stop it! :-P
If you are just starting off your FJ you really need to ask yourself what you want to do with it over the long term. If you are just going to be hitting the snow with it then you could do something like your thinking about.
My advice would be to stay with 16s or 17s, generally speaking more rubber is better. I guess it looks cool with the 18s (i'm a little on the conservative side) but the first time you take this thing of road your probably going to be regretting your decisions for several reasons:
1. Scratch, a bigger rim will get much more scratched up (on or off road)
2. Pinch flats are much more likely to occur when you air down as there is less actual space between the rubber and the rim
3. Traction - the reason you see big tires and smaller rims is because most people air down when they go off road, by airing down you leverage the pliability of your tire to increase the contact patch (surface area where the tire meets the dirt) thus reducing the amount of weight at any one particular area of dirt and generally increasing traction (not to mention your tire conforms better to rocks and give a much smoother ride off road) A 16 or a 17 inch tire has plenty of room to handle that, step it up to an 18 or 20 inch and all of sudden you have no room for that tire to flex.
4. Big blings scream steal me
5. Last but not least, airing down reduces the impact to soils and the off road environment.
Bottom line...if your objective is to never go on anything greater then a fire road that can be done with a 2wd honda civic, get the 18s or the 20s.
If you are even considering running more difficult trails like you see a lot of folks here doing, consider 16s or 17s and get more meat (My FJ isn't a vegetarian). Spend the extra money you saved on some better tires :-).
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