Fitment help and questions
#11
Registered User
Thread Starter
Do you guys think the CE28's 17x7.5 +48 will fit without fender mods AND also clear BBKs (TL type S OEM brembos) up front? I'm considering CE28's now since they're similar style and seems like the size/offset offered might be better for my requirements
Last edited by Streetfury; 07-04-2024 at 07:48 PM.
#12
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Illnoise. WAY downtown, jerky.
Posts: 8,393
Received 1,413 Likes
on
1,051 Posts
Give your front fenders a little feeler. Notice those big flappy tabs that are holding the fender liner up? Now you know why your stock wheels are so sunken in.
Also, why do you want the TLS Brembos? Just like the way they look? They will make fitment difficult because its not only a big caliper...but it sits closer to the hub than a kit whose rotors are a larger diameter. The TLS brakes aren't a BBK. They're just a 4 piston caliper which clamps a stock, or stock sized rotor.
Last edited by B serious; 07-08-2024 at 04:40 PM.
The following users liked this post:
Streetfury (07-08-2024)
#13
Registered User
Thread Starter
No, not really. You still need to mod the fenders to be safe. You *might* be OK at stock height, but idk...
Give your front fenders a little feeler. Notice those big flappy tabs that are holding the fender liner up? Now you know why your stock wheels are so sunken in.
Also, why do you want the TLS Brembos? Just like the way they look? They will make fitment difficult because its not only a big caliper...but it sits closer to the hub than a kit whose rotors are a larger diameter. The TLS brakes aren't a BBK. They're just a 4 piston caliper which clamps a stock, or stock sized rotor.
Give your front fenders a little feeler. Notice those big flappy tabs that are holding the fender liner up? Now you know why your stock wheels are so sunken in.
Also, why do you want the TLS Brembos? Just like the way they look? They will make fitment difficult because its not only a big caliper...but it sits closer to the hub than a kit whose rotors are a larger diameter. The TLS brakes aren't a BBK. They're just a 4 piston caliper which clamps a stock, or stock sized rotor.
I guess I'm biased towards the TL Type S brembos because it's also on my TL so to have them on both vehicles, same parts and maintenance, familiarity and also cost lol
#14
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Illnoise. WAY downtown, jerky.
Posts: 8,393
Received 1,413 Likes
on
1,051 Posts
Here's my car back when it had 17x7.5 +45's. Its a 225mm tire. My camber was -2.5 deg.
I could have easily bacon'd the fenders if I went up that incline with the wheels turned even a hair.
I would later go on to destroy my fenders using that exact wheel setup. I spun the car, tried to counter steer, and the tire turned my fender inside out by grabbing the fender liner tab.
The trick to avoid this is to cut off the 3 front-most fender tabs and pancake the fender lip flat, without changing its shape.
Now I'm on 17x9.5 +47 with 255mm tires all around. Zero rubbing. I carefully modded my (brand new) fenders and used SPC ball joints to set the wheel/tire relative to the fender. My camber angle is -2.7 deg.
This is my spring thru fall commuter car, so it gets driven more now than ever before. As long as I don't fully crank the wheel and go up a steep driveway like a buffoon...I'm good.
Even if I had a tiny bit of tire/fender contact, I took away or smoothed out any surface that the tire could use to grab onto and rip out the fender lip.
My lips are totally flattened and I've used seam sealer and polyurethane to seal everything into a completely smooth edge.
One thing....if you plan to use your car in the snow/salt, then absolutely do not mod your fenders.
I could have easily bacon'd the fenders if I went up that incline with the wheels turned even a hair.
I would later go on to destroy my fenders using that exact wheel setup. I spun the car, tried to counter steer, and the tire turned my fender inside out by grabbing the fender liner tab.
The trick to avoid this is to cut off the 3 front-most fender tabs and pancake the fender lip flat, without changing its shape.
Now I'm on 17x9.5 +47 with 255mm tires all around. Zero rubbing. I carefully modded my (brand new) fenders and used SPC ball joints to set the wheel/tire relative to the fender. My camber angle is -2.7 deg.
This is my spring thru fall commuter car, so it gets driven more now than ever before. As long as I don't fully crank the wheel and go up a steep driveway like a buffoon...I'm good.
Even if I had a tiny bit of tire/fender contact, I took away or smoothed out any surface that the tire could use to grab onto and rip out the fender lip.
My lips are totally flattened and I've used seam sealer and polyurethane to seal everything into a completely smooth edge.
One thing....if you plan to use your car in the snow/salt, then absolutely do not mod your fenders.
Last edited by B serious; 07-08-2024 at 06:17 PM.
The following 2 users liked this post by B serious:
jamesyun (07-17-2024),
Streetfury (07-08-2024)
#15
Registered User
Thread Starter
Here's my car back when it had 17x7.5 +45's. Its a 225mm tire. My camber was -2.5 deg.
I could have easily bacon'd the fenders if I went up that incline with the wheels turned even a hair.
I would later go on to destroy my fenders using that exact wheel setup. I spun the car, tried to counter steer, and the tire turned my fender inside out by grabbing the fender liner tab.
The trick to avoid this is to cut off the 3 front-most fender tabs and pancake the fender lip flat, without changing its shape.
Now I'm on 17x9.5 +47 with 255mm tires all around. Zero rubbing. I carefully modded my (brand new) fenders and used SPC ball joints to set the wheel/tire relative to the fender. My camber angle is -2.7 deg.
This is my spring thru fall commuter car, so it gets driven more now than ever before. As long as I don't fully crank the wheel and go up a steep driveway like a buffoon...I'm good.
Even if I had a tiny bit of tire/fender contact, I took away or smoothed out any surface that the tire could use to grab onto and rip out the fender lip.
My lips are totally flattened and I've used seam sealer and polyurethane to seal everything into a completely smooth edge.
One thing....if you plan to use your car in the snow/salt, then absolutely do not mod your fenders.
I could have easily bacon'd the fenders if I went up that incline with the wheels turned even a hair.
I would later go on to destroy my fenders using that exact wheel setup. I spun the car, tried to counter steer, and the tire turned my fender inside out by grabbing the fender liner tab.
The trick to avoid this is to cut off the 3 front-most fender tabs and pancake the fender lip flat, without changing its shape.
Now I'm on 17x9.5 +47 with 255mm tires all around. Zero rubbing. I carefully modded my (brand new) fenders and used SPC ball joints to set the wheel/tire relative to the fender. My camber angle is -2.7 deg.
This is my spring thru fall commuter car, so it gets driven more now than ever before. As long as I don't fully crank the wheel and go up a steep driveway like a buffoon...I'm good.
Even if I had a tiny bit of tire/fender contact, I took away or smoothed out any surface that the tire could use to grab onto and rip out the fender lip.
My lips are totally flattened and I've used seam sealer and polyurethane to seal everything into a completely smooth edge.
One thing....if you plan to use your car in the snow/salt, then absolutely do not mod your fenders.
Thank you, yeah looks like no avoiding haha. Fortunately and unfortunately I live in socal so no worries about snow here
The following users liked this post:
B serious (07-09-2024)
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post