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Location: Hobart, Tas
Registered: May 2002
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I supported Toymods
Location: Perth
Registered: May 2002
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Registered: November 2002
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Re: Anyone have lists of offsets/sizes/widths that oldschool jap rims are available in?
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Tue, 26 October 2004 05:26

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I've got some info at home on various rims that suit a RA23/28. I will dig around for it tonight.
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Location: Hobart, Tas
Registered: May 2002
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Re: Anyone have lists of offsets/sizes/widths that oldschool jap rims are available in?
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Tue, 26 October 2004 12:26

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Stefan wrote on Mon, 25 October 2004 23:25 | Would be very handy. I've searched the net and haven't come up with anything.
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Been there 
Thanks ra23celica.
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Registered: November 2002
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Re: Anyone have lists of offsets/sizes/widths that oldschool jap rims are available in?
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Tue, 02 November 2004 02:16
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Sorry to drag up an old post but I finally found some info that might help you.
The measurements below were done using rims stripped of tyres, a straight edge and a good tape measure, and clearance measurements are in comparison with the std steel rims, and do not account for tyres, so you can still have rubbing issues depending on your tyre choice.
Std RA23/28 steel rims are 14 x 5.5 and measure 170mm outside edge to outside edge. Offset is 32mm.
MZ/GZ Soarer rims are 15 x 6 and measure 180mm edge to edge in width. Their offset is 20mm and they increase the overall track by 24mm. (Still legal here in WA). They sit 6mm further out/away from the strut tower/shockie than the std steel rim and 17mm further out from the outside edge of the std steel rim.
MA61 Supra rims are 14 x 7 and measure 204mm edge to edge. Offset is 8mm and the track increase is 48mm in total (Illegal but you can argue they are a std Celica rim). These sit 5mm away from the tower more than the std steel rim and 39mm further out than the outside edge of the steel rim.
The best way to picture all this is to draw a vertical line on a big piece of paper. This is your hub mounting face. Next draw three horizontal lines that intersect the vertical one using the offsets above to give you the centre of each rim. Then extend each line for the width of your rim and you have your compariosn chart ready to go.
From this, knowing the rim width and offset you can see what other rims will fit your car.
And for the sake of the exercise, I measured up a aftermarket alloy 7 inch rim in 10mm and 40mm offsets. Given a width of 210mm, the 10mm offset increases track by 44mm, sticks 42mm out further on the front edge but is only another 2mm away from the suspension than a steel rim. Fitting the extra 42mm under the guards would be the problem here. And the track increase as well.
The 40mm offset 7 inch rim, decreases (note !) the track by a total of 16mm (illegal in WA) sticks out only 12mm above a steel rim but is 28mm closer to the suspension.
So, as you can see, as wheel width increases, offset has to drop towards zero in order to fit the rims without fouling anything. Hope this helps.
Mitch.
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