Wheel Offset Fitment Chart
#1
Wheel Offset Fitment Chart
Here is a comprehensive list I put together for most of the wheels available for the Evo X.
Mitsubishi Evo X Wheel Offset Fitments:
•Measurements with stock wheel: 18x8.5 ET38 w/ 245 40 18 tires.
•These measurements are for clearance to outside fender and inside strut/shock.
•“+” means closer or less clearance to, “-“ means farther away or more clearance from.
•Stock front suspension – 13mm clear from wheel lip to strut body. 25mm clear to outside fender.
•Stock rear suspension – 22mm clear from wheel lip to shock body. 19mm clear to outside fender.
•More negative camber will provide more clearance to outside fender.
•Suspension compression will also provide additional clearance over static measurement.
•Larger tires will reduce clearance. R-compounds run wider than street tires.
•Recommended tire sizes are: 9.0”= 245/255. 9.5”=255/265. 10.0”=265/275. 10.5”=275/285
•1” = 25.4mm. Below numbers are within 1mm due to rounding rules.
Outside Fender / Inside Strut, Shock (in mm)
9.0"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0 (Stock wheel)
18x9 ET38 +6/+6
18x9 ET35 +9/+3
18x9 ET29 +15/-3
18X9 ET22 +22/-10
18x9 ET20 +24/-12
9.5"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18x9.5 ET38 +13/+13
18X9.5 ET35 +16/+10
18X9.5 ET30 +21/+5
18x9.5 ET28 +23/+3
18X9.5 ET27 +24/+2 (Enkei NT03-M: need spacer to clear front brakes)
18X9.5 ET25 +26/0
18X9.5 ET22 +29/-3
18x9.5 ET20 +31/-5
18X9.5 ET15 +36/-10
18x9.5 ET12 +39/-13
10.0"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18X10 ET38 +19/+19
18X10 ET35 +22/+16
18X10 ET25 +32/+6
18x10 ET22 +35/+3
18x10 ET20 +37/+1
18X10 ET15 +42/-4
18x10 ET12 +45/-7
10.5"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18X10.5 ET38 +25/+25
18X10.5 ET35 +28/+22
18X10.5 ET30 +33/+17
18X10.5 ET25 +38/+12
18x10.5 ET22 +41/+9
18x10.5 ET18 +45/+5
18x10.5 ET15 +48/+2
18x10.5 ET12 +51/-1
Mitsubishi Evo X Wheel Offset Fitments:
•Measurements with stock wheel: 18x8.5 ET38 w/ 245 40 18 tires.
•These measurements are for clearance to outside fender and inside strut/shock.
•“+” means closer or less clearance to, “-“ means farther away or more clearance from.
•Stock front suspension – 13mm clear from wheel lip to strut body. 25mm clear to outside fender.
•Stock rear suspension – 22mm clear from wheel lip to shock body. 19mm clear to outside fender.
•More negative camber will provide more clearance to outside fender.
•Suspension compression will also provide additional clearance over static measurement.
•Larger tires will reduce clearance. R-compounds run wider than street tires.
•Recommended tire sizes are: 9.0”= 245/255. 9.5”=255/265. 10.0”=265/275. 10.5”=275/285
•1” = 25.4mm. Below numbers are within 1mm due to rounding rules.
Outside Fender / Inside Strut, Shock (in mm)
9.0"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0 (Stock wheel)
18x9 ET38 +6/+6
18x9 ET35 +9/+3
18x9 ET29 +15/-3
18X9 ET22 +22/-10
18x9 ET20 +24/-12
9.5"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18x9.5 ET38 +13/+13
18X9.5 ET35 +16/+10
18X9.5 ET30 +21/+5
18x9.5 ET28 +23/+3
18X9.5 ET27 +24/+2 (Enkei NT03-M: need spacer to clear front brakes)
18X9.5 ET25 +26/0
18X9.5 ET22 +29/-3
18x9.5 ET20 +31/-5
18X9.5 ET15 +36/-10
18x9.5 ET12 +39/-13
10.0"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18X10 ET38 +19/+19
18X10 ET35 +22/+16
18X10 ET25 +32/+6
18x10 ET22 +35/+3
18x10 ET20 +37/+1
18X10 ET15 +42/-4
18x10 ET12 +45/-7
10.5"
18x8.5 ET38 0/0
18X10.5 ET38 +25/+25
18X10.5 ET35 +28/+22
18X10.5 ET30 +33/+17
18X10.5 ET25 +38/+12
18x10.5 ET22 +41/+9
18x10.5 ET18 +45/+5
18x10.5 ET15 +48/+2
18x10.5 ET12 +51/-1
Last edited by smgevo; Mar 10, 2009 at 08:41 PM.
The following 4 users liked this post by smgevo:
#2
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This should be stickied as I've looked for a chart like this myself.
About the recommended tires sizes it really depends on the manufacterer quite a bit, and the "measured rim width" stat that tirerack has on their tire spec charts seems to be the natural width of the tire without forcing the sidewalls inward or outward. Most if not all 275mm wide tires list 9.5" as the measured rim width and then have a range that they can be used with such as 9 - 10" or 9.5 - 11", and the wheel width range seems to vary widely from brand to brand quite a bit as well.
I've seen 265mm wide tires have a range of 9.0 - 10.5" where as 275mm wide tires in the same brand list 9.0 - 10.0" which seems a bit odd. Also differences between 18" and 19" wheels can effect it as well of course due to the shorter sidewalls. Keep in mind that wheels are 1" wider than listed from outer lip to outer lip so a 9.5" wheel is actually 10.5" wide measured outer edge to edge. An average 275mm wide tire is 10.8", 265mm = 10.4",255mm = 10.0", but you really have to check the "section width" stat to verify what the actual size is before knowing if the tires will fit well or look pinched in/bulged out. Usually stepping one range wider or narrower than optimal is barely noticeable since you are splitting .2" on each side of the wheel. For that reason 9.5" = 255/265/275 in my book, I'm not sure what the measurements come out to on the other sizes.
Recommended tire sizes are: 9.0”= 245/255. 9.5”=255/265. 10.0”=265/275. 10.5”=275/285
I've seen 265mm wide tires have a range of 9.0 - 10.5" where as 275mm wide tires in the same brand list 9.0 - 10.0" which seems a bit odd. Also differences between 18" and 19" wheels can effect it as well of course due to the shorter sidewalls. Keep in mind that wheels are 1" wider than listed from outer lip to outer lip so a 9.5" wheel is actually 10.5" wide measured outer edge to edge. An average 275mm wide tire is 10.8", 265mm = 10.4",255mm = 10.0", but you really have to check the "section width" stat to verify what the actual size is before knowing if the tires will fit well or look pinched in/bulged out. Usually stepping one range wider or narrower than optimal is barely noticeable since you are splitting .2" on each side of the wheel. For that reason 9.5" = 255/265/275 in my book, I'm not sure what the measurements come out to on the other sizes.
Last edited by Hiboost; Feb 23, 2009 at 04:36 AM.
#3
I know what you are saying about tire sizes and agree with you. I threw that bullet in there last minute as that question is also a hot topic always associated with wheel width discussion.
Remember as well that a lower profile tire needs a wider section width in the same size wheel width: A 35 series may need a .5" wider rim than a 40 series in some cases. This is especially true in 17" wheels and 40 vs 45 series. The published recommendations by manufacturers are guidelines and they don't always pick the "best" fitment, but one they wish to compare other tires to, possibly due to weight differences as one example. As a general rule of thumb, I like to increase rim width .5" over stock for the same size tires, so I would put a 245 on a 9.0" rim if I was going to upgrade to that size.
From a performance standpoint, wider rim, narrower tire within spec is preferred. I just replaced my NT01 275's with 265 R888's and 265 R1's (this one being .25" narrower than the toyo). Both fit the 9.5" rim better and are less wide when mounted. The R1 has a much squarer side wall than the R888. I was having a problem with side wall roll over on the larger 275 Nitto's with the stock suspension. That tire would do best on a 10 or 10.5 IMHO. And as R compounds they are already wider. After evaluating the Toyo and BFG as to which one I like, I may even try the 255 size to see if there is any time difference and what performs best on a 9.5" rim.
Remember as well that a lower profile tire needs a wider section width in the same size wheel width: A 35 series may need a .5" wider rim than a 40 series in some cases. This is especially true in 17" wheels and 40 vs 45 series. The published recommendations by manufacturers are guidelines and they don't always pick the "best" fitment, but one they wish to compare other tires to, possibly due to weight differences as one example. As a general rule of thumb, I like to increase rim width .5" over stock for the same size tires, so I would put a 245 on a 9.0" rim if I was going to upgrade to that size.
From a performance standpoint, wider rim, narrower tire within spec is preferred. I just replaced my NT01 275's with 265 R888's and 265 R1's (this one being .25" narrower than the toyo). Both fit the 9.5" rim better and are less wide when mounted. The R1 has a much squarer side wall than the R888. I was having a problem with side wall roll over on the larger 275 Nitto's with the stock suspension. That tire would do best on a 10 or 10.5 IMHO. And as R compounds they are already wider. After evaluating the Toyo and BFG as to which one I like, I may even try the 255 size to see if there is any time difference and what performs best on a 9.5" rim.
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#8
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They would likely fit, but be about 5mm inward compared to stock which already have that sunken battleship look. Your Inner clearance to the suspension would drop from 13mm to 8mm so unless the tires used were extremely oversized it should still work. Getting 15-25mm spacers would likely reverse that quite well but the farther out you push them the more likely fender rolling will be needed.
#10
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For consistancy of thread, your question is best answered in the agressive wheel fitment thread in Show and Shine. But quickly, the 10mm spacer will give you an effective offset of 17, so the clearance will be +34 to the outside and -8 to the inside. No problem on the inside, but I personally think the outside will rub with stock camber settings. (BTW, I did not double check to see if the NT03+M needed the spacer for the 9.5 or 10.5 fitment or both. I will try to find it).
Why not select the many wheels available without the use of a spacer? If you are set on 9.5, ET22-35 is the "safe" range, with 25-30 being a perfect centered fit. The Nittos are limited to 245 and 275. Why not buy the R888 in 255 or 265?
Why not select the many wheels available without the use of a spacer? If you are set on 9.5, ET22-35 is the "safe" range, with 25-30 being a perfect centered fit. The Nittos are limited to 245 and 275. Why not buy the R888 in 255 or 265?
#11
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18x9.5 ET26
18X9.5 ET27 +24/+2 (Enkei NT03-M: need spacer to clear front brakes)
18X9.5 ET25 +26/0
18X9.5 ET25 +26/0
#12
Did anyone istall 17" on EVO X? I think of using 17" for winter.
I tried TE37 17*8.5 with offset 30 - it doesn't fit, but seems like with offset 20-22 it should fit.
ADVAN GR-II 17*9.5 with offset 22 fits the caliper, but will probably contact with outside fender, so probably 17*8.5 should fit.
I tried TE37 17*8.5 with offset 30 - it doesn't fit, but seems like with offset 20-22 it should fit.
ADVAN GR-II 17*9.5 with offset 22 fits the caliper, but will probably contact with outside fender, so probably 17*8.5 should fit.