You are unequivocally the best technical offroading channel on KZbin at the moment - no one else even comes close to the level of detail, care, information and effort as you do - thank you so much for contributing so much to this awesome hobby!
@Highmepdx Жыл бұрын
Wheel size/offset/spacing (all of that) has been something I've struggled with for years of messing with different platforms. This cleared up so much confusion.
@TheIznog9 ай бұрын
The weird thing is that hes actually right unlike most other channels.
@AshleyDeSouza792 ай бұрын
the algorithm should be boosting his channel. There should be way more subscribers.
@K-10_ENT2 ай бұрын
not even kind of close
@GassyWookieАй бұрын
His explanations are easy to digest. He doesn’t just state something and leave you wondering why. He gives you the why and makes it easy to understand.
@mikeb.7068 Жыл бұрын
Mechanical engineer here. I enjoy seeing you cut through all the myths and guesses with correct theory and data.
@CMP_Offroad Жыл бұрын
As an off-road suspension specialist this is best explanation ever ! And sometimes it’s hard to get customers new to the off-road world to understand this ! Awesome vid
@let_freedom_ping5 ай бұрын
So am I understanding correctly that I can throw 285/70/17 on my stock FJ then?
@Mr_Kirk_3 ай бұрын
@@let_freedom_ping Exactly. That's what Peter did. You can zoom in at @11:33 to see the size.
@NB-yn7dv Жыл бұрын
Very few people on the internet these days produce correct information on tire size, suspension, etc. and so I can't tell you how refreshing it is to watch your videos. I wish more people would watch them. I got in an argument with a friend recently about the low backspace wheels on his jeep tj (3.5in) and how they were the reason the tire was rubbing the back of the wheel well when fully turned. He insisted that the wheel wells were poorly designed by jeep engineers and that they purposely made them too small to restrict owners from putting larger tires on.
@SolarMillUSA7 ай бұрын
People always think that manufacturers and product designers are intentionally doing things to screw over the customer. I work in manufacturing. We don’t. And in a related sense, yes “planned obsolescence” does occasionally happen for some products, but that term is way overused. Most things that people call planned obsolescence is just price point value engineering. We have to compete with other cheap products on the market. We can’t be cheaper and make something that lasts for 15 years, nor does our research say that most customers need a product that last for 30 years in most categories (and as someone that cares about sustainability, this guts me.) What people say they care about- long life and the absolute best quality, is consistently undercut by how they actually spend their money when it comes time to make a purchase.
@pahaf1991 Жыл бұрын
I fell for the “you need UCA to run bigger tires” I used to run 265-70-17 on factory uca. Now with jba, I do rub. I was telling everyone that they do not help, and everyone was saying I was wrong. Thank you for making great videos.
@rodjones812 Жыл бұрын
You are 100% on the money. I put BFG 275’s on my stock 2020 TRD Off Road 4Runner with absolutely zero clearance problems… On the “factory wheels”. Keep up the great work & myth busting 😊
@mrpresident8798Ай бұрын
I have 275 on black rhino wheels. My previous owner put it with -ve offset (not sure how much, I just see a spacer). When I replaced my bumper due to a crash, the tire started rubbing. I had to scrape some of it off by an inch or 2.
@C.Double. Жыл бұрын
Im actually blown away by how technical yet easily digestable your information is... you deserve so many more subscribers!!!
@TrailTape Жыл бұрын
Once again, the quality of your information, presentation style, and production values are second to none. Absolutely top-notch content!
@rudetoy8264 Жыл бұрын
Love the big tire & fender spacing breakdown. Wish I have this vid back in 2005 when I start modding my Tacoma for accommodating 37” BFG with 2.5” lift, flattened pinch weld, hammered in footwell, body mounts relocated, cut out fenders, mud-flaps removed, etc. has been fun! But your vid bring back memory😃
@Scoobienorth Жыл бұрын
This is extremely well done and very much accurate across many platforms. Even Jeep. Wheel offset is critical along with your alignment settings. It’s common place to add more mods which all work together to hinder performance that you are after where less can be more in the end if you know what you are doing
@HoanZone Жыл бұрын
Holy smokes did you do an amazing job at explaining things. As an engineer I knew there was more to it than just cutting. Your explanation plus video clips put it altogether in an easy to digest package. Subscribed!!
@eredforhonor4937 Жыл бұрын
Mate I love your's engineering approach in contrary to slapping all the available gear. And you present the information in a very informative and factual yet interesting way. Keep on doing great job!
@Empir3X_007 Жыл бұрын
first time posters on TacomaWorld have just been silenced by a single video!... although watching this would require research...nevermind. HaHa!!
@tareskisloki8579 Жыл бұрын
We have the same problem on Australian Hilux servers, but if they can't use the search bar, they're not likely to watch a video either. lol
@dirkmohrmann8960 Жыл бұрын
Hey sorry I'm new here and I'm looking to fit 54s on my Tacoma, can anyone tell me where I can buy 19" shock spacers? My budget is $6
@Mellow429 Жыл бұрын
@Dirk Mohrmann it's sad I took you seriously. I need to stay away from some forums lol
@deadbrother5355 Жыл бұрын
Not just first time posters. Long time members who are seen as knowledgeable as well.
@alejandrochiquete1274 Жыл бұрын
All those chads
@adisonpieske771911 ай бұрын
Dude… THANK YOU! I have watched numerous videos on your channel and cannot begin to explain how informative your videos are. Incredible stuff!!!
@shootinglaser Жыл бұрын
Another great vid as always! Articulation over lift has always been my main focus on my Trooper, especially being top heavy w/ a large RTT. That's why I'm going w/ a 255/85 on my stock 16" wheels. I gain ground clearance with no fitment issues, plus the "skinnier" tire shouldn't stress my drivetrain as much as a 285/75 tire.
@jamiethomas8975 Жыл бұрын
Thats what i did for my first gen tundra and I love it. 33s which is perfect for my needs, gives me more clearance and not as much added weight. I seriously love 255s
@christophersmith9963 Жыл бұрын
I'm also going pizza cutters when I go to 33s on my 98 4Runner I also run only moderate lift (1.75") in the front so I can retain plenty of down travel.
@christopherwilson9140 Жыл бұрын
I think about a year into off roading I started questioning doing "all the lift". and certainly in the last 6 months I eventually had enough pucker moments to accept hitting the armor in tradeoff for lower COG and better travel so I am less likely to roll on the super sketch stuff. especially since there are so many 4x4s that only have like 4-5in travel stock.
@christophersmith9963 Жыл бұрын
@@christopherwilson9140 There's also the reduced wear on front end components factor. Extreme lift comes with extreme wear to basically everything that moves on the front end of an IFS. The only reason to go for that stuff is for the mall crawler status, it doesn't help offroad. And like you said just let the armor take some hits, if you have good aftermarket armor that's what it was made to do. If you really need more clearance you really should be doing long travel and unless you are doing really hard crawling then chances are you can get away without that very easily. Just 1.75" of lift gives me like 8.5-9" on my engine skid which is gravy as long as I choose lines properly.
@tumbleweedbikes Жыл бұрын
I run 255/80r17 on my 2nd gen Tacoma with just a basic 2” lift and some OEM 4Runner wheels and have no rubbing whatsoever. Perfect tire size for IFS Toyotas! 255/75r17 is probably even better since it is significantly lighter and doesn’t necessitate a regear like the 255/80r17 does on my 4cyl Tacoma.
@crism3954 Жыл бұрын
Got 32 inch tyre installed on my N70 2014 model. No need a body chop. Just push the castor a bit forward like what he said in the end and no need body chop. I don’t have to control the upper control arm. Thank you this is very helpful.❤️❤️
@QuickJuggernaut2 ай бұрын
This video blew my mind. So many videos and information about lifting Lexus GX 460s in this video is all about engineering and working with the limits. I thought about raising my GX with the suspension kit., I’m just going with 275/65/18 with no lift. Very good educational and subscribing to the channel after one video. Amazing content, thank you!!🎉🎉
@DaveSki86 Жыл бұрын
Share almost every video to our local Yota club, thank you as always for the insight, science and mathematical approach.
@brawldawg8729 Жыл бұрын
As a person with an understanding of suspension and alignment from the tech side, you did a great job explaining and giving visuals that the layman will be able to understand!
@nligman Жыл бұрын
I am so glad that you make these videos! When I bought my Tacoma, i looked to popular internet forums for information, and quickly found myself questioning the recommendations as they didn't line up with my measurements and understanding of the suspension components. For my truck, I have tried to optimize performance by installing a Bilstein 6112/5160 because found that I needed the additional fluid capacity to mitigate high temps. I then installed the shocks with only 1' of lift so that I would ride in the middle of the zone, while adding both up and down travel. I maintained the factory UCAs and eliminated the sway bar. This keeps me very close to the original design intent. If i choose to run a bigger tire in the future, it will be a 255/85/16, which i believe is the better width for the stock TRD OR wheels. I can't tell you how many people that i have had to explain scrub radius to and how many people think that a lift solves clearance issues. I have recommended your channel to the masses on the popular forums. Great job and keep setting the record straight with engineering principals.
@Tarkanbh Жыл бұрын
Very good video indeed - myth busting as well. To summarize, in you opinion, what would be the optimum wheel offset for a 285/70/17 with under 2" lift on and FJ? 😮
@bobbyshaftoe Жыл бұрын
Best Logical Description of IFS tire/offset ramifications I have seen yet. Great job!
@rossipremier Жыл бұрын
Best video I've seen on ifs period, Toyota or otherwise, thank you. Looking at your example early in the video you had a TRD wheel which has a positive 4 offset, non TRD is 14 or so I think. So with the x/2, a TRD wheel over stock that is around 10mm, then a 285 tire vs 265 is another 10mm in width that acts like offset so 20mm total or 10mm from clearance. Stock tires are 31.5 to 32 depending on brand, so going 33 is 1inch more or about 13mm less clearance, so we are up to about 23mm or round up to a full inch with about .5inch to spare if the mud flap is removed...based on the FJ example at the end since they had the stock wheels and not trd
@firebir11 Жыл бұрын
Three people just agreed with your conclusion... first had an engineering degree, second was older and wiser and would think things through and the third was poor ....Nice video
@rapturoussex Жыл бұрын
GX470 owner here! This video is freaking amazing! Thank you so much for you research and knowledge!
@gordon926 Жыл бұрын
This was best video to explain how offset, lift, caster is affected. Thank you so much!
@goforbroke2 Жыл бұрын
You deserve way more subs, keep doing your thing. I can’t think of any Toyota truck focused KZbinr who takes a true in-depth engineering approach to their videos. Also high five for a another PA dude, I swear I seen your FJ around.
@HD46409 Жыл бұрын
I'm really liking your stuff. So much of the information on the interwebs about off-road vehicles is "Bro-Science" (e.g., wider tire = bigger contact patch). Given tires are such a poorly misunderstood aspect of all wheeled sports (don't get me started on picking tires for my next XC MTB race), may I suggest an engineering/evidenced based series on all aspects of tires.
@TinkerersAdventure Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Yes, I do plan to make that video on narrow vs wide tire. Stay tuned!
@mark.esposito Жыл бұрын
I wish I had your videos when starting to mod my Toyota way back when, I would have saved a lot of money 😂 Thanks again for another great video dispelling all the bad internet advice!
@wyc4934 Жыл бұрын
Absolute legend. Most youtubers in Australia just slap on 4 inch lift and long ass bumpstop so their tyres stick out of their car to fit 35". And because of these excessive lift their car are no longer road legal and needs to spend more to get an engineer to certify their car. Probably spend as much money modifying it than buying it.
@tylaroverturf Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video as always! If I go up to 35" tires on my 3rd gen 4runner i'll be going with skinny 10.5" ones. Not the normal 12.5" wide.
@blairrad1785 Жыл бұрын
Kenda Klever 35x10.5r17. Under $1000 a set.
@tylaroverturf Жыл бұрын
@@blairrad1785 Yep those are the ones i'll be going with.
@Jay-me7gw Жыл бұрын
I've also noticed there are a number of 35x11.5R17's out now. Toyo, Nitto, and Falken have them. This is what I am going to do on my F150 even though it does clear the current 315/70's.
@jimskatr103 Жыл бұрын
@@blairrad1785 my plan
@wirebrush Жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I wish more people would see the benefits of narrower tires and create enough demand to get more manufacturers to offer tall and narrow tires. It seems they're still much more common in most of the rest of the world, but too many Americans are all about form over function.
@derrickhh14 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing!! This is undoubtedly the best channel on KZbin
@BrokeWrench6 ай бұрын
Finally a youtube video i can learn something from. Most of this is intuitive for me because i understand the effects of, castor, backspacing, kingpin angles, ect Youve earned a new subscriber
@PapalTime Жыл бұрын
I frequent those places you're talking about where everyone says it's hard to fit 33's to an FJ, but everyone that had trouble had upgraded suspension. I did the measurements myself and found no reason they shouldn't fit. Factory suspension, slipped right in. No need to adjust at all. I do get the occasional instant of scrub at full compression on the track but I've never lost any rubber and there's no marks from it. If I'd gone with the offsets that were recommended on the forums, I'd have bought rims that would fit their suspension and would have scrubbed on mine.
@otonielchavez5062 Жыл бұрын
Best Toyota guy on KZbin.
@TomFJC Жыл бұрын
Great video like always, thanks again for spreading some much needed knowledge. I was lucky to have someone help me adjust everything properly from day one. I had 33s with stock suspension and wheels 10 years ago. When I finally lifted it recently, was able to get close to 2.5 lift without a BMC.
@ianparsons8894 Жыл бұрын
What vehicle do you have? FJ Cruisers can generally fit 285/70R17 quite readily on the stock setup but the Prados make it a bit more difficult.
@SuperGunsnstuff Жыл бұрын
Im so excited i accidentally did this right. Gx470 skinny 33s bilstein 5100s and front sway delete. Thank You for all you do!
@outdoorGL4 ай бұрын
Hands down the best video on youtube about fitting tires on your Toyota.
@quinkelley1134 Жыл бұрын
I love finally hearing someone else actually look at the geometry of the problem. I'm convinced I could fit 34s (the baja boss 255/85/17) with the stock wheels and minimal work on my 4runner. Hopefully I'll have the cash to figure that out soon!
@TinkerersAdventure Жыл бұрын
Let me know how it goes! That would be a sleeper
@andreinvictoria Жыл бұрын
255/85/17 best size for IFS Toyota. Happy trimming 😀👍
@shootinbruin3614 Жыл бұрын
I have those exact tires installed on a Hilux, which has very similar IFS. Be aware that the Baja Bosses measure closer to 35" than the nominal 34.1". That said, clearing them required a change in offset from the stock +30 to +5, a body mount chop, maxing positive caster, and cutting out the inside of the front bumper. A bit of work, but now completely clear with no lift. When the suspension compressed and some steering angle there's minor rubbing, but not much and only with the plastic inner liner. Good luck on your build!
@quinkelley1134 Жыл бұрын
@Shootin' Bruin that'd great info! I may still try to go this route, but a bolt in the road said I had to get new tires sooner than I had anticipated lol. To reduce the risk of adding more cost with modifications, I think I'm going to go one step down with a set of 255/80r17s. The nittos and the wildpeak rts both supposedly measure 33.3, I'm hoping I get get away with less for now. Still taller than the 285/70r17s most people get!
@shootinbruin3614 Жыл бұрын
@@quinkelley1134 Glad you find it useful! Going one step down should help reduce the required clearance work significantly. Pizza cutters should really be more popular!
@utubevind Жыл бұрын
Complete guide on bigger wheels for IFS for dummies right here in this video. Thanks mate! A week of research wouldn’t have matched up to the experience and knowledge shared here. Lots of confusions and misconceptions got cleared watching your video. Subscribed !
@TeCKis300 Жыл бұрын
Geeked out so hard! Hat tip to such a well done video that covers concepts that will break bro trucks minds. Kudos as the community will greatly benefit from this, laid out in an easy to understand fashion.
@rudymoralesjr11 ай бұрын
I learned so much watching your video from a Honda "light truck" owner perspective! I have a Passport wanting 32 inch tires, and so much of what you cover is what JonDZ describes in his Passport/Ridgeline/Pilot tire video...but so much more detail! He now runs 33 inch tires on his rig (with lots of modification), but I'll stick to 30.5 inch tires and will leave the bigger tires to you Yota folk...for now!
@09darkS Жыл бұрын
very nice vid. you forgot my knob where i need big tires and big lift to offset my small pp
@rohanmckitrick5578 Жыл бұрын
The trap with the 150 prado in Australia is the +25 offset from the oem rim, a 285/70r17 will rub on the oem UCA.
@_TenaciousD_ Жыл бұрын
Love this info!! Quality vid as always. I've been saying this for years in the Jeep IFS community because everyone thinks to fit 33" tyres on the WK/XK platform you need UCAs, 4" lift minimum (plus pinch weld mod), and -12 offset rims (stock are ~+44). Whereas I made measurements cycling the susp and figured I could fit 33x12.5R17 with o offset offset wheel (needed to clear upper BJ) on a 1" lift and pinch weld mod (and carefully trim the wheel arch plastics, but still retain the inner fenders). I ran that setup on and offroad for a year before upgrading to heavier duty susp for increased load and towing which netted an increase in susp lift but no change to tyre clearance like you say. Scrub radius is a very important thing to consider!
@MHam1 Жыл бұрын
Nice video. Biggest thing I learned was the tire pivoting around the steering axis (now it makes sense why negative offset increases rubbing). And hadn’t heard about “casual fallacy” since my philosophy class in college!
@rakib1508 Жыл бұрын
best offroad content on youtube
@evangelosp.1523 Жыл бұрын
I own a jeep commander diesel in Greece and I learn stuff from a Toyota IFS pro in the US😂. Gotta love youtube. Keep up the great informative videos!!
@96kylar Жыл бұрын
Well done Kai.... well done. Im willing to bet, there are many that spent thousands, and gained nothing over my cheap, working lift, with proper offset. (285/70/17s)
@stansbruv3169 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for researching and sharing your knowledge with the world. The world appreciates you!
@markouellette788 Жыл бұрын
Could you do a video on how you would actually fit a 33-inch tire on a 4Runner with no rub or cutting?
@XploreAz5 ай бұрын
Go with pizza cutters. 255/85/17
@GavinEarnshaw Жыл бұрын
Moral of the story : Be like Peter, don't be a Chad 😎 Awesome vid again my friend. I was referencing your channel in both of thr professional off-road courses I taught last week.
@stuartarneaud218 Жыл бұрын
I have a Prado 120 series with 2” lift and 285 70 R18 had no cutting to do u are extremely correct
@randomuser6306 Жыл бұрын
Depends on your use. You go offroad and fully compress the suspension whilst turning at speed? I drive on the sand with a prado 150....275/65 rubbed on the inside. 10/10 prado 150 vehicles (4runner, fj, prado, gx) get rubbing with 285/70 R17's. I know several shop owners and am regularly in the shop myself. All of them, and I truly mean all, have visible rub marks in the wheel well. It's amazing that you don't with r18's, unless the wheeling you do is different.
@MrRmga420 Жыл бұрын
I own a GX 460. I fit 275/70r18 tires on my factory wheels without any lift. Beside rubbing plastic, I was rubbing UCA. So I threw some 1.25” wheels spacers on and instantly started rubbing body mount. So naturally I did a BMC and hammered the pinch weld flat. I then successfully cleared 33s with no lift. I did add a leveling kit for fun. Certain obstacles were easier though with more ground clearance.
@zachf6256 Жыл бұрын
Great one Kai. OFFSET IS KEY So many misunderstandings within this scope I run a 315/70/17 with a +25 - TE37 on my Tundra. 5100 middle setting. Alignment is within spec. No BMC. Stock UCA - Parking lot princess.
@RuggedRunnerOverland Жыл бұрын
Excellent video! One modification I regret on my 4Runner build is going with a -12 offset wheel, definitely should have went with a 0 offset.
@itr0863 Жыл бұрын
I have a 2’ dobinson lift on my 5th gen 4R. Nice to know I can still keep the stock wheels when I move to 285’s.
@chaseking6080 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely fantastic video. I was able to use this info to fit Falken AT3W 33s, stock TRD wheels and Ironman UCAs on my '21 4runner without a BMC with no rubbing at full lock and compression...besides moving the fender liner forward a few inches. Tha k you putting this together.
@sraldiris11 ай бұрын
Tinkerer's Adventure provides the best suspension tech on youtube for Toyota IFS. THANK YOU for sharing this info!
@sanddrifterjb Жыл бұрын
During our Geiser Bros Lexus LX570 Baja race SUV build, we ended up with 17" front/rear travel with 37" BFG KRT race tires. We had to do a little massaging here and there, like a 3" body lift but used stock upper / lower arms and stock oem steering box per SCORE rules.
@tkelly1087 Жыл бұрын
Do you know any of the specifics of how you got that much travel with stock A-arms? Most long travel kits with 3 to 5 inch wider arms don't even get 15" travel. Was the spindle modified with a vertical uniball for the upper A-arm possibly? I'm looking into putting long travel on my 4runner so am very curious if what you claim is true. Thanks
@FJX2000_Productions Жыл бұрын
Another fantastic video! And thanks for the little feature 👍😁 When I bought my first FJ it had no lift or aftermarket wheels, but the previous owner had installed 285/75R16s on it. And just as you mentioned, it had no rubbing! So yes, 33s can fit without any mods, but what’s the fun in that 😉
@shootinbruin3614 Жыл бұрын
Your pizza cutter video is what made me go with the 255/85R17's! Keep up the good work!
@FJX2000_Productions Жыл бұрын
@@shootinbruin3614 glad I could help!
@billm4138 Жыл бұрын
I'm an old Landcruiser guy...Fairly new to toyota IFS...Kai has taught me alot as I build my 2020 TRD OR..Being a mechanical engineer he really knows his stuff..I'm doing a 3 inch lift with zero offset wheels and 33 inch tires..
@shredfest30 Жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your methodical and accurate technical description on every one of your videos.. Every Toyota owner needs to watch them, because event the not so mentally gifted can read through the picture book you present.. Great work again Kai!
@dukenukem7183 Жыл бұрын
I just installed medium ironman foamcells with freedom offroad upper and lower arms on my fj. It's huge, i hope the springs settle in a little. 35s now look small
@Mr.Preston3991 Жыл бұрын
Every video ive watched from you has no music. I love it!
@damionkoger Жыл бұрын
Thank you for these videos! I'm happy to see/ hear you talk a little about spacers. Would love to see more regarding their use, good or bad. I love your videos and use them when planning upgrades to my Tacoma.
@shootinbruin3614 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video as always Kai! It's from the knowledge gained from your UCA and IFS videos that I successfully fitted 255/85R17s to my Hilux. They're taller than some nominal 35" tires, but their being 2.5" narrower allowed me to keep more positive offset to minimize scrub radius. A BMC and some other cutting were still needed, but that's just to be expected with tires whose radius is >2" over stock. You are simply a wealth of information. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with all of us!
@TinkerersAdventure Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Did you get the Baja Boss AT? I’m considering getting a set as well
@shootinbruin3614 Жыл бұрын
@@TinkerersAdventure Yup! They're the only tires in that size IIRC, although Kenda and Interco offer pizza cutters in very similar sizes as well. Not sure if you've seen his video, but Hayden over at FJX2000 Productions put Baja Boss ATs on his FJ
@bobbylite33 Жыл бұрын
@@TinkerersAdventure Just got a bone stock 2008 GX 470. Do you think that I could go from factory wheel (+25 offset) to a wheel with 0mm offset and upgrading tires from 265/65r17 to 265/70r17 without rubbing?
@MrCdrant Жыл бұрын
Your vids are so well done, and the narration is stellar
@notakm9957 Жыл бұрын
on my gx470 i just ran 32.2s, i only have cosmetic cuts for a more aggressive look and i wouldnt even need spacers if i just got correct offset wheels
@XxSasuke114xX Жыл бұрын
with my 2016 hilux basically i did 4 inch lift on the front, i did upper control arms i got -12 rims on 286/70r17’s and i cut the inner wheel guard and bent back a bit if the metal behind it, i took a hammer to the body mount just barely dinting it inwards and now get no scrub at all
@deucebigs9860 Жыл бұрын
Hands down the best video on tires and lifts out there.
@davidfraley3821 Жыл бұрын
The concepts suggested in this video still resulted in rubbing on the front wheels on the mud flaps and in front on the fender. Truck is bone stock 2008 4runner v8, wheels are 275/60r20 on 20x9 wheels, +19 offset.
@Methadras11 ай бұрын
Very good presentation of straight facts. Well done and informative. Also, I'm running Fox 2.0 2" lift on JBA UCA with Falken Wildpeak 285 70 17's on Fuel Vapor D596 at -12mm offset. Setting Camber/Toe to factory and Caster to 4 degrees on my 2021 Tacoma TRD Sport. No cab mount rubbing and heat deformed the wheel well plastic on the front to clear minimal rubbing. At the bump stop, there isn't rubbing either. I think overall based on my math, and a competent alignment tech, I achieved a good mount.
@SlimeInnaTaco Жыл бұрын
Dude your channel is the best because you have statistics in it and keep it interesting
@mschulz55 Жыл бұрын
Great video and explanation of what going on with your suspension when trying to go bigger tyres
@cesarlchen1515 Жыл бұрын
Wow... your videos are on another level. It shows that you do know what you are talking about. I have a humble request: given the price of gas and the poor mpg that big tires/lift-kits generate, I would like you to consider also working on upgrading RAV4-hybrid's AWD... I know that this is NOT made for difficult trails but, I will be happy with any recommendations/observations you could make for helping this little brother in the Toyota family to clear easy to medium trails, providing the greatest clearance and the largest tires that mathematically/efficiently is possible. So far most people fit under 30" tires with 1.5"-2.5" lift-kits and minimum trimming, but I don't think that they worry about all the variables that you consider in your videos. i.e. there is NO expert voice out there guiding 'illiterate' people (like myself) on how to get the most out of our RAV4-AWD-Hybrid investments. Some guys have added 32" tires with scary trimming, I will be happy if I could fit 245/70r16 with whatever recommendation lift-kit you may suggest... or to be convinced that it is not worth it... I just value your opinion and do not trust what people are doing out there. Thus far I have subscribed just on the hope that you may expand your videos to cover Rav4s. I thank you for sharing your knowledge and look forward to hearing from you.
@TinkerersAdventure Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I like the rav4. It’s the more sensible vehicle for most people. I’d love to review a rav4 one day
@patricklink8527Ай бұрын
A question. First guy to give me a full understanding of what is really going on. Very well done. It answers all the right questions. The shot of 12-15 adjust. Huge. Although no one talks about it. Spacers have been a thought. To get the 33s. I just replaced the shocks and struts. Springs. rubber Ect. Seems to be level at rest, ride is much smother. Alignment is good. There is still the FJ rake, need to level. It dips more when stopping. The old ones looked original. With the pitch and yaw gauge in f FJ's, I am able to actually see it. It changed by about five to 8 degrees forward pitch at stops. So in from the area of 10 degree's too as severe 16-17. Depending on speed Any suggestions? Thank you. 33" 255s anyone?
@UrbanOpsOffRoad Жыл бұрын
Keep up the good work kai, I always show your videos to the ones new to IFS. Thanks for the dedication to the community.
@tomshelburne78842 ай бұрын
Great video! With a ‘23 GX460, you would recommend a low lift (1-2”) with Bilsteins perhaps, but then what would be the best/most functional wheel/tire combo to gain a larger tire but avoid body chop?
@4xhoser Жыл бұрын
Been running 285/75r16 at3ws for 3 years now, same set, no rubbing still have mudflaps 😜🤘 Stock offset wheel no lift is the way to go LCG 🤘🇨🇦
@billcole979911 ай бұрын
So I can run that size on my 23 sr 4x4 with no lift? Trd off-road rims
@totalnoobfishing17534 ай бұрын
@@billcole9799 TRD offroad rims(+4mm) have a different offset to your stock SR5 rims (+15mm)
@BlackWorksInc Жыл бұрын
I love the hard work and the detail you go into, very thorough and shows a lot of the small nuances of lifting/modifying a vehicle. It's always a balancing game and figuring out what needs to be tweaked to find the best balance between all factors, it may not always be expensive, or conversely easy to do, but it is worth the effort in my opinion. I do have two things that I would point out from my experience with my own vehicle as well as customer's, generally your "static" tire clearance is easier to compensate for than your "compressed" tire clearance; which is where a lot of people run into issues. Using your friend Peter as an example, unless he's limited his up-travel, I can say with almost complete certainty that he's rubbing against the body mount when doing sharper turns on angled surfaces (such as driveways, ramps, etc.). This is because as you pointed out here and in other videos that there is more to the suspension/steering than just the wheel's Camber Angle, you need to also take into account the SAI (Steering Angle Inclination, sometimes referred to as "King-Pin Inclination" in some applications), and if you want to get really in the weeds the "Combined Angle" (sum of SAI and Camber vs. True Vertical). Going back to Peter before I get too distracted by those angles, in his case; yes, he's clearing the 2nd Body Mount by a very thin margin while "static". But due to the nature of IFS and factoring in SAI, when the suspension is compressed, the caster will be reduced and positive camber is introduced into the assembly; particularly in situations where the wheel is being turned. This results in the usual compliant I see about rubbing or binding up of the tire on turns while going up or downhill (this was an annoying thing I fought when throwing 35x12.5R17's on my 4th gen, particularly since I had some specific goals in mind), unfortunately in many cases this is not something that's easy to balance given a person's set-up/budget/etc. Which brings me into my second point, which is the nuance of the myth regarding needing Higher Caster. This is something that I realize I myself have failed to clearly explain when recommending fellow enthusiasts and customers to purchased higher caster UCA, namely that it's not that you need higher caster numbers, but that you need more adjustment. It's a very pedantic distinction I know, but it is a very important one to point out here because it ties into the above point regarding SAI and the way alignment changes under dynamic states such as compressed and uncompressed. Simply increasing your Caster to a larger positive value alone does not assist significantly in better clearance for your tires as you pointed out in your video. By moving ONLY the UBJ, you're gaining some level of tire clearance, but also increasing the likelihood that under compression you're going to rub in turns as the loss of caster when compressed becomes exaggerated (think motorcycle front wheels vs. car wheels going over bumps for a very rough example). So if you and I are agreeing that using aftermarket UCA to increase your Caster via the UBJ position is less beneficial than most would think, why do I still encourage people to use them? Clearly because then I can make hours installing them! (Joking obviously.) The reason is because an aftermarket UCA with either built-in and/or adjustable Caster (ideally one with both Caster & Camber adjustment would be best) will offer your suspension far more adjustability before maxing out your Adjustment Cams on the Lower Control Arms. Now bear with me as this is a harder thing to visualize without a model or diagram, but due to the nature of a Dual Wishbone IFS, we actually adjust Camber/Caster in 2 axis (forward/backward, inward/outward) by modifying 1 endpoint of the Steering Axis (the LBJ). By installing an aftermarket UCA you are now changing the Steering Axis at the other end of the imaginary line, by taking advantage of these facts you can effectively move the two endpoints of the Steering Axis forward while maintaining relatively stock (or custom) Camber/Caster numbers for your needs. This becomes even easier when you install UCA that provide adjustments for Camber/Caster on-top of their built in design (i.e. the typical Billet UCA design and/or tube UCA that have threaded collars at the pivot points as well as swappable spacers). I'm sure I've lost a couple of you and have the others squinting suspiciously and scratching their heads by now, so just bear with me a little longer here. Now, in an ideal situation we have both upper and lower control arms with adjustability, we can play with those adjustments on Peter's FJ to keep his factory Alignment and simply move the entire spindle/hub forward something like 0.5" (12.7mm for you fractionally challenged :P) which would alleviate the possibility of his tire rubbing along the 2nd Body Mount on turns under compression. Now, there might be some trimming towards the front bumper and fender liner that needs to be achieved depending on the tires, wheel offset, etc. (again, as I pointed out, this all a balancing act!); but he could also negate the vast majority of those concerns by just going with a high clearance winch bumper (gotta get them billable hours in mates! j/k). Apologies for the long, boring soliloquy, but I figured it was important to point out the more critical nuance there for people and who knows, maybe you can find a way to demonstrate that in a diagram to really show the nuances of tuning a suspension? Anyways, keep up the great work! :) Post Note- I feel this is a bit more obvious and has to do more with tire width and wheel offset, but factory UCA from Toyota have that large rounded end due to their stamped metal design, aftermarket UCAs allow you to have wider tires/wheels with more negative offset before your sidewalls rub on the suspension components (the nub on the spindle is the next likely spot to rub depending on your tire/wheel configuration if you run a "lower profile" design of UCA.
@KyleXSki Жыл бұрын
Currently sizing tires for my GX that I just bought wheels for and did similar measurements for offset compensation to calculate my clearances to my fender liner. So for reference for others, my stock suspension dealer aligned GX clearance is as follows using a stock 265/60r18 baldish stock highway tire. With an 18x9 +20 wheel turned both ways I measured the tightest spot. On the backside of the fender closest to the notorious bolt gxs have I had 1" of clearance, and on the front I had 1.5" of clearance. Adding a 1.25" spacer effectively turning the wheel into 18x9 -12, the clearances are 1/4" now on the rear and 3/4 on the front. This confirms Kais measurement of 1.25" spacer, approximately reducing clearance by about 5/8ths of an inch to your front and rear fender liners. I may have missed it but one other key thing to note, is while increasing offset does decrease your clearances, it also changes ~where~ the tire may rub. Because you only get so much steer angle, there is a point where I noticed in my back to back testing on the ground, that the closest contact point body to tire, did change a fair bit inside to outside of the chassis. So in my usecase, a bit more offset actually helps past a certain point as I will be retaining factory fender liners and not going to a 33" tire, but to a 31.7" over the stock gx size. Wheel offset is all give and take. In a perfect world you run appropriate width tires for your needs, which is probably a lot skinnier then most people purchase. Gosh darn do wheels with big dish/concave faces and fat tires look good though haha. Ended up with a 17x8.5 -10 wheel, which is arguably gonna hurt my factory uncut clearances a lot, however I'll be fine for now with the next tire size up (LT265/70r17), some minor liner massaging and the rig will look great. I'll cut it apart and put fat tires on when its time to lift the GX when the airbags go. Till then going to enjoy the comfortable ride!
@Crb1210 Жыл бұрын
Thinking of doing the same thing! I have a 2018 GX460 (no air suspension). Would I be able to go 275/70/17 with 0 or -10 offset wheels? Or is 265/70/17 the best I can do with that offset? It seems a lot of the wheels I like are in that offset range (SCS Ray10s for example). I'm open to any offset though if it helps clearance
@KyleXSki Жыл бұрын
@@Crb1210 I'm gonna put a 265/70r17 on mine which is a 31.7" tire and I know I'm gonna need to heat and bend plastic fender liners and it's gonna be tighter on the front cab mounts but should clear. Unfortunately with these vehicles, you can't get greedy with tire size. Anyone KZbin or Instagram with 33"+ tires is living with some compromises you may not wanna make. Body mount chops, hammering pinch welds and the firewall, cutting bumpers and side skirts, not running fender liners are all super common. For me, I'm not ready to hack apart my 2016. It's stock and still comfortable and until it gets a big lift where I can justify cutting body work and putting in big effort I would rather run a smaller tire for now. Mind you, I live where it's cold and frozen for half the year, there's lots of salt, sodium chloride and other horrible shit on the roads so the drawbacks of fucking up the wheel wells and big tires are much more then anyone in the desert where rust and such isn't an issue. Figure out how much effort you wanna put in the pick a tire size. Some guys have 35s with a big lift on their rig, but it's work and ain't cheap
@KyleXSki Жыл бұрын
@@Crb1210 like this video has mentioned, if you do want rolling diameter, you can do a 255 and get a 33" tire under a GX but on a trd 4runner wheel.
@Crb1210 Жыл бұрын
@@KyleXSki Ah- damn. I may just stick with 265/70/R17 with some wheels that have maybe a +10 to -10 offset. I live in PA and they use tons of salt during the winter. I guess if I get wheels that aren't stock width of 7.5in, I should decrease offset? Lots are 17x8, 8.5, and 9in width wheels for me
@bobbylite33 Жыл бұрын
Just got a bone stock 2008 GX 470. Do you think that I could go from factory wheel (+25 offset) to a wheel with 0mm offset and upgrading tires from 265/65r17 to 265/70r17 without rubbing?
@Kypreparedness8 ай бұрын
On my 2008 4Runner I went with 2” lift front and rear, jba uppers, superpro offset lowers, and 265/70r17 on stock wheels. Clearance is great. I used to like big tires that stick out past the fenders and stuff the wheel wells, but as I’ve gotten older prefer more wheel travel and not slinging debris all over my vehicle. Not to mention going to a 285 would only give me 1/2” or so more ground clearance
@LinusScrubTips8 ай бұрын
Your information is so useful for the off-road community in general. I don’t even own a Toyota lol. Great content.
@eddiegray1979 Жыл бұрын
Very good video…I had to do a little more bmc when I added the 1.5” spacers with the 305/70 R17
@ericrdutton9 ай бұрын
can you do a pizza cutter clearance comparison? I want to get 255/85r16's for my stock suspension tacoma, as I've heard they can fit with no rubbing but I'm hesitant to go for it
@SolarMillUSA7 ай бұрын
Seconded. (And just venting, I remain frustrated that there are still such limited options for tall “skinny” tires. I am over the fat wide and chunky mall crawlers.
@ericrdutton7 ай бұрын
@@SolarMillUSA update: I did it. I have 255/85 r16 falken wildpeak MT's on and I could not be happier. I rocked them on stock suspension with zero issues for about a month before I got my bilstein lift.
@SolarMillUSA7 ай бұрын
@@ericrdutton thank you for the update! That is so rare on the internet. Based on your rec I think I might go with the exact same setup you did.
@orinjackson975 Жыл бұрын
Love your content, you’re like Fortnine for trucks. Wish you would get into Nissans because the frontier guys need more quality content like this!
@robertom883 Жыл бұрын
Great content, this was not a surprise for me whatsoever. Key here is knowing what exactly are you building your vehicle for. Most people will do it for the looks more than anything else, but if that’s your thing and you have the cash nothing wrong with that.
@frankburch51049 ай бұрын
Great video! I have a deposit down for a Lexus GX550 Overtrail and I really hope there will be an elegant solution to fitting larger tires to increase ground clearance. In one interview the Lexus GX550 chief engineer said that it was designed for 33's with no consideration for larger tires.
@bernardmcnamara Жыл бұрын
HI from Australia. 🇦🇺 As you were talking about IRS front suspension. There is one type of mod lift you forgot to mention. That's a upper ball Joint spacer. Thus lowering the upper ball Joint allowing several inches of suspension again out of the front suspension..
@Gunmonkey56 ай бұрын
You gained a subscriber. I have been scouring the internet for info like this. 1 video trumps all the info I’ve gotten from reading online
@MyCarsandProjects4 ай бұрын
Love your videos, I love how you back up everything you say with facts and data with diagrams and physics. love it! After watching your other video about pizza cutters, 255/80-17, I made the decision to go that route and will also keep the factory wheels.
@Drmansurahmad116 күн бұрын
You are correct as far as the tire is running on level ground and of same consistency .. Do uou 1:53 get that off road … I wonder why the side walls of off road ties have lugs
@Sitruc_btb Жыл бұрын
Brilliant sir. Your videos are very educational. I actually figured out why my Broncos tires were rubbing on right side at full lock, after upper control arm replacement. Bingo. A bit too much positive caster, pulled the tires back a bit. Wouldnt have figured that out without these great videos. The weirder thing to ponder is, I think I need to add more positive caster, to pull the tire forward and away from my sway bar. Guess I'll tinker myself.
@oriolpijimenez2074 Жыл бұрын
Great video!! I am really considering down lifting my Toyota FJ from my 2 inch lift back to factory specs, but fitting my 33 inch tire. It would be great if you make a video exactly how to shift forward the front tire
@Yawniiin Жыл бұрын
Up
@tprountzos11 ай бұрын
Wow. Someone who knows what they are talking about and can explain it clearly.
@neilrambaldi4 ай бұрын
This is golden information, sir. Thank you.
@worldadventurist9420 Жыл бұрын
Well done, it's the explanation everyone needed but didn't want to hear
@Cooperd0g Жыл бұрын
After watching your previous videos I ended up with an Ironman lift. I got their upper control arms because I was effectively replacing all the suspension components anyway. I chose 255/80R17 tires to help with fit and the OEM wheels. I get the smallest rub in one spot only on the plastic so I don’t even worry about it.