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Is that what caused the accident in the other pics we were shown?
Not sure on the cause yet but i seriously doubt it.
From the information mentioned it sounds like a run up Mt Nebo/Mt Glorious etc and hit a rock/pothole at speeds in excess of the reccomended road rules.
225/35R19 tyres only have a load rating of 88. 235/35R19 tyres are 91. VW don't have an 88 tyre approved for the R. They do for the GTI Performance which is fitted with the smaller tyre.
A 225/35R19 can go on an 8" rim but a 235/35R19 can't go on a 7.5" rim.
VW have two choices with DrK. They can replace his tyres with legal ones or they can have the R retrospectively ADR approved for an 88 tyre, print a new tyre placard and stick it on his car. The former option will be MUCH cheaper.
I can't believe they haven't replaced them yet. If it were me I'd be straight onto Fair Trading. What's the point in having ADRs if the manufacturer doesn't have to abide by them?
A 225/35R19 can go on an 8" rim but a 235/35R19 can't go on a 7.5" rim.
But looking at the photos, the 225 looks a tad stretched on R rims.
It was only my speculation about the smashed up rim, clearly they need some assistance to smash apart like that, but running lower load rating, less vertical profile due to less width, and subtle stretch to fit the wider rim would not do so well with a rock or pothole hit..
Trying to find some stretch/specs for 225/35R19, and it will go onto 8", but here is 8.5" and it is quite stretched: Tyrestretch.com 8.5_225_35_R19
Look at 235 on 8.5", even that looks a little stretched: Tyrestretch.com 8.5_235_35_R19
That website doesn't have any 19" x 8" rim/stretch pics
But looking at the photos, the 225 looks a tad stretched on R rims.
It was only my speculation about the smashed up rim, clearly they need some assistance to smash apart like that, but running lower load rating, less vertical profile due to less width, and subtle stretch to fit the wider rim would not do so well with a rock or pothole hit..
Agreed the lower load rating could cause issues on an impact/tyre failure, although that seems unlikely here - and as confirmed the R had the correct fitment.
Still disagree on 225 being a stretch on 8s though. I run that combo and I wouldn't describe it as stretched.
The R wheels should generally be strong, thus all the weight. I'm sure we will hear more, but it still sounds like other factors at play here.
--- FS: 2016 Golf GTI 40 years, white, DSG, 18,xxxkm ------------------------------------------------------------------- 2019 Audi SQ5 | 2016 Golf GTI CS + OZ UL HLTs | Retired: 2018 Audi RS3 sportback + OZ Leggera HLTs
2017 Golf R Wolfsburg Sportwagen | 2016 BMW 340i + M-Performance tune/exhaust | 2015 Audi S3 sedan
2014 Golf GTI + OZ Leggera HLTs | 2012 Polo 77TSI (hers) | 2010 Golf GTI Stage 2 + OZ ST LMs
If they sell a car that is not ADR compliant they need to do a recall to rectify the problem. You might want to remind VW that they don't have a good history with that sort of thing.
If they sell a car that is not ADR compliant they need to do a recall to rectify the problem. You might want to remind VW that they don't have a good history with that sort of thing.
It's about the load rating, to suggest 225 on 8 inch wide tyres is a stretch is just wrong.
For tyre aspect ratios of 45 or less, there is generally a 1.5 inch variation between the minimum and maximum wheel rim width. Vehicle manufacturers tend to match specified tyres to minimum wheel rim width specification. This is probably due to a combination of factors, but does mean sidewalls sit square in the rim. Tyres are considered stretched if they are splayed, but are completely legal when fitted to wheels up to the 1.5 inch variation, or whatever the tyre manufacturer specifies. Of course, fitting wider rims to any car has to meet the relevant ADR.
Putting all technical issues aside, including load limits, the tyres fitted to DrK's car are not what he would have reasonably assumed to be correct based on the specifications listed in the product brochure, which of course are subject to change at any time, but they haven't changed. As far as I know, all R's delivered before and after DrK's have been fitted with 235/35 R19 91Y tyres, so why is Volkswagen Australia dragging their heels on this issue? This appears to be Volkswagen's modus operandi and the lessons learnt from last year's public relations fiasco seem to have been long forgotten.
Putting all technical issues aside, including load limits, the tyres fitted to DrK's car are not what he would have reasonably assumed to be correct based on the specifications listed in the product brochure, which of course are subject to change at any time, but they haven't changed. As far as I know, all R's delivered before and after DrK's have been fitted with 235/35 R19 91Y tyres, so why is Volkswagen Australia dragging their heels on this issue? This appears to be Volkswagen's modus operandi and the lessons learnt from last year's public relations fiasco seem to have been long forgotten.
I wasn't implying that DrK shouldn't complain - my response was purely the contention earlier that 225 on x 8 wheels is a stretch fitment when it's actually a perfect fit.
I agree completely with your comments, these tyres absolutely should be changed over to meet the specs as ordered/bought, but most importantly the load rating at 88 is below that specified at 91. No idea why VW plays games like this but hopefully this gets resolved on Monday. Still not sure why a resolution is required, a simple yes we shall swap that over ASAP should suffice.
--- FS: 2016 Golf GTI 40 years, white, DSG, 18,xxxkm ------------------------------------------------------------------- 2019 Audi SQ5 | 2016 Golf GTI CS + OZ UL HLTs | Retired: 2018 Audi RS3 sportback + OZ Leggera HLTs
2017 Golf R Wolfsburg Sportwagen | 2016 BMW 340i + M-Performance tune/exhaust | 2015 Audi S3 sedan
2014 Golf GTI + OZ Leggera HLTs | 2012 Polo 77TSI (hers) | 2010 Golf GTI Stage 2 + OZ ST LMs
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