Above Forum Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

MK6 Wheel / Rim / Tyre Thread

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Try Tempe Tyres or Blairs.

    It's probably worth your while to buy 2 tyres (say Michelin PSS or Goodyear F1A2) and put them on the back. Keep the loose good tyre in case something goes wrong with the remaining 2 Dunlops. You'd still be looking at $350 each but you'll have 2 tyres with 8mm tread rather than one side with 8mm & the other with 4mm
    carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
    I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

    Comment


    • Originally posted by samps View Post
      I recently fitted the same wheels to my CSG 3 door. Did you get them from Advance in Richmond?

      [ATTACH=CONFIG]7479[/ATTACH]
      Why does it look like they should be going the other way?

      Are all four wheels identical or do two have the lobes going one way and two the other? Don't know why this occurred to me.

      Matters not but interested in what the case is here. I'm assuming all four are the same therefore the left side turning opposite to the right.......

      Comment


      • michelin pilot super sport,



        tested GOOD for braking:



        not so good if there was a tailgating small hatch with texting female driver or an overconfident tradie Hilux / Dmax / large SUV / misc ute with a driver who believed the car had a 8 pot brembo brakes kit and yoko ad08r.
        Mitsubishi Pajero Sport - Super Select 2WD/4WD
        Toyota 86 GTS Performance Pack Moon Slate - RWD
        MINI Cooper S Clubman - FWD

        Comment


        • Hi All,
          My 2010 GTI which I have owned since 2012 looks like it needs a new set of tyres. The front ones are more desperate than the rear. The inside front is losing air too causing the dashboard warning to trip every two weeks. I'm not doing any long trips and have none planned so I've just been topping up the pressure and resetting the warning.
          The tyres look to be standard and are Dunlop SP Sport Maxx GT.
          I live in Perth and would be grateful for suggestions on make and supplier. My needs are very basic city driving.
          2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

          Comment


          • Originally posted by MovieDude View Post
            I live in Perth and would be grateful for suggestions on make and supplier. My needs are very basic city driving.
            I fitted Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 2's to my GTI, and couldn't recommend them more highly. They're a high performance tyre but also very quiet and compliant considering. They're right up there as the overall tyre to have right now, and can be had very cheaply (under $200 per tyre depending on size).
            2008 MkV Volkswagen Golf R32 DSG
            2005 MkV Volkswagen Golf 2.0 FSI Auto
            Sold: 2015 8V Audi S3 Sedan Manual
            Sold: 2010 MkVI Volkswagen Golf GTI DSG

            Comment


            • Originally posted by AdamD View Post
              I fitted Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 2's to my GTI, and couldn't recommend them more highly. They're a high performance tyre but also very quiet and compliant considering. They're right up there as the overall tyre to have right now, and can be had very cheaply (under $200 per tyre depending on size).
              Okay I'll check them out. I did ring Beaurepairs and was quoted over $400 per tyre for the Dunlops!
              2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

              Comment


              • Originally posted by MovieDude View Post
                Okay I'll check them out. I did ring Beaurepairs and was quoted over $400 per tyre for the Dunlops!
                There are a heap of tyre threads with suggestions & prices - have a bit of a search.
                carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

                Comment


                • Originally posted by AdamD View Post
                  I fitted Goodyear Eagle F1 Asymmetric 2's to my GTI, and couldn't recommend them more highly. They're a high performance tyre but also very quiet and compliant considering. They're right up there as the overall tyre to have right now, and can be had very cheaply (under $200 per tyre depending on size).
                  The only stockist within 10kms is selling the 225/40 18s for $360/tyre. Can I ask what size you fitted to your GTI that brought the cost down to under $200?
                  2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

                  Comment


                  • You might have to buy online & ship them.
                    carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                    I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

                    Comment


                    • Do I have to use 225/40 18s?
                      2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

                      Comment


                      • pretty much unless you buy some 17" rims. 235/40r18 are cheaper but need a minimum 8" rim IIRC. You are on 7.5"???

                        Here's how to get the best price:

                        Go to Tempe tyres website. 225/40r18 are around $200. I'd recomend Michelin PS3 which are $225.
                        x4= $900
                        Allow $100 for shipping to Perth = $1000
                        Allow $100 for fit, balance, valves & disposal = $1100

                        Go to Bob Jane's (or whoever is local) and ask them to match the price. BJs will match AU web prices these days. If they don't want to come close then bring your tyres in from the East.

                        BTW, Dunlop SP SportMaxx 92Y are $150 each at Tempe so I'm not sure what orifice your local tyre dealers are pulling their prices out of.
                        carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                        I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by MovieDude View Post
                          The only stockist within 10kms is selling the 225/40 18s for $360/tyre. Can I ask what size you fitted to your GTI that brought the cost down to under $200?
                          225/40 R18.

                          I suggest you read this thread: Good price on Goodyear Tyres

                          Rubal is still doing fantastic deals on Eagle F1 A2s - he'll ship them to you and you can get them fitted locally. Save hundreds.
                          2008 MkV Volkswagen Golf R32 DSG
                          2005 MkV Volkswagen Golf 2.0 FSI Auto
                          Sold: 2015 8V Audi S3 Sedan Manual
                          Sold: 2010 MkVI Volkswagen Golf GTI DSG

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by brad View Post
                            pretty much unless you buy some 17" rims. 235/40r18 are cheaper but need a minimum 8" rim IIRC. You are on 7.5"???

                            Here's how to get the best price:

                            Go to Tempe tyres website. 225/40r18 are around $200. I'd recomend Michelin PS3 which are $225.
                            x4= $900
                            Allow $100 for shipping to Perth = $1000
                            Allow $100 for fit, balance, valves & disposal = $1100

                            Go to Bob Jane's (or whoever is local) and ask them to match the price. BJs will match AU web prices these days. If they don't want to come close then bring your tyres in from the East.

                            BTW, Dunlop SP SportMaxx 92Y are $150 each at Tempe so I'm not sure what orifice your local tyre dealers are pulling their prices out of.
                            Don't know what my rim size is sorry.
                            The Beaurepairs quote was for Dunlop SP SportMaxx GT ZR18 92Y. There are "non-GT" and there are "Z" rated. Mine are GT and ZR. I don't know if I HAVE to have those. Apparently the "Z" allows for higher speeds - I can sacrifice that. As for the R or ZR classification I am clueless.
                            2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by AdamD View Post
                              225/40 R18.

                              I suggest you read this thread: Good price on Goodyear Tyres

                              Rubal is still doing fantastic deals on Eagle F1 A2s - he'll ship them to you and you can get them fitted locally. Save hundreds.
                              Latest price for four Goodyear F1 Asymmetric 2 225/40 R18s was $740 plus $60 for freight to Canberra (I'm in Perth). I only need two but if I bought the four plus freight, fitting and balancing they would still be more than the Tempe prices (and more work for me). Thanks for the link though.
                              2010 | Mk 6 | Golf GTI | DSG | black | 18" Detroit's | MDI

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by MovieDude View Post
                                Don't know what my rim size is sorry.
                                The Beaurepairs quote was for Dunlop SP SportMaxx GT ZR18 92Y. There are "non-GT" and there are "Z" rated. Mine are GT and ZR. I don't know if I HAVE to have those. Apparently the "Z" allows for higher speeds - I can sacrifice that. As for the R or ZR classification I am clueless.
                                There's a wonderful placard inside your fuel flap that will tell you the rim size and also the minimum load & speed rating. It is not unlikely that the tyres fitted are of a higher rating than the minimum requirement for a Golf of 92 (630kg) and Y (300kph).

                                The only 225/40r18 Sport Maxx GT that Dunlop list on their site is 99Y (775kg/300kph).

                                GT is just a model designation and means nothing in terms of performance or technical meaning - like Michelin has a PS3.

                                ZR = probably another marketing tool as R means radial & Z is a 240kph speed rating which is obviously less than the 300kph Y rating.

                                I think the Beaurepaires guy probably isn't very good at explaining things or is trying to confuse you into paying a lot more than you need to. /looks again - is he trying to sell you the 235/40ZR18 95ZR???

                                Anyway, I think you've been given sufficient info to make an informed choice and probably save a few hundred dollars and end up with a better tyre than the Dunlop. Both the Goodyear F1A2 and the Michelin PS3 are far better than the Dunlop in any test - take your pick.
                                carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                                I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X