also be sure to check that the hub opening is big enough.
Ill try looking for that size tomorrow. At work now and Ebay is blocked
I'm looking at 20' rims with a -44 backspace so I should have plenty of room. But I didn't even think about the hub size. I will have to measure and make sure the center hole is big enough for hub. Thanks again. Yall truly do know everything.;D
Thank you for the explanation, but at the end of it all I shouldn't have any issues with a 20' and -44 offset right? The problems come with the inner rim hitting either steering linkage or ball joints correct?Backspace does not equal offset, but they do describe the position of the wheel mounting surface, just from different datums. If you're looking for a -44mm offset wheel, that means that the mounting surface is 44mm [1.73"] to the inboard side of the wheel centerline, effectively pushing the wheel out. A positive offset wheel would have a mounting surface to the outboard side of the wheel centerline.
You can convert to backspacing, however you would need to specify a wheel width to do that.
Offset explained with pictures: http://www.discounttire.com/dtcs/infoWheelOffsets.do
Backspacing would be the measurement from the mounting surface to the inner lip of the wheel, and doesn't change regardless of wheel width.
Thank you for the explanation, but at the end of it all I shouldn't have any issues with a 20' and -44 offset right? The problems come with the inner rim hitting either steering linkage or ball joints correct?
Thank you for the explanation, but at the end of it all I shouldn't have any issues with a 20' and -44 offset right? The problems come with the inner rim hitting either steering linkage or ball joints correct?
Without a wheel width, the offset means nothing.
I forgot to mention the width Im looking at is 12'
Go big or go home
Now that just confused the hell out of me......so you think I need backspacers so I can run 20x12 wheels with a -44 offset??You need to do the math. A 12" wide wheel with a -44mm offset will have an effective backspacing of 8.23". I calculated that by taking the wheel width, lip to lip, which should be approximately 13" and dividing it by 2 to get the theoretical centerline spacing, which would be 6.5". The offset is -44mm, or -1.73" to the outboard side of centerline, so take 6.5" and subtract -1.73", which equals 8.23".
The commonly accepted BS range for 15" wheels is 3.5" to 4.5" depending mostly on the radius arms, where long travel aftermarket arms typically have more tire clearance than the stockers. Wheel diameter shouldn't have any impact on tire placement, so you're going to either need to run huge spacers and/or live with having no turning radius. The only way you could feasibly run such wide wheels/tires with such large backspacings would be to run full-width 1-ton axles...and even then you may need wheel spacers depending on the tires you choose to run.
The other interference issue tends to be the tie-rod ends, however with 20" wheels those shouldn't be an issue.