still_life127
Member
Hi All. This issue is driving me insane, so I hope someone has some experience with it.
After finally deciding to ditch the knock off FR-500 that have been giving me hell with balancing from day one... I was left with the brembo clearance problem with my stock 18's. Obvious solution? 1" Wheel spacers... Seemed easy enough. Lots of people run them. I was going to pick up a set from american muscle but I wanted black, being that my rotor hubs are powder coated black and my wheels are painted black, I didn't want this sore thumb sandwiched in the middle. So I came across this set:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/380802961934?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1497.l2649
Perfect. Affordable, Black, and according to the item description - "hub centric"
So after a month of dealing with the god-awful stock 2 pistons I finally got these bad boys in the mail and got to work. I did everything the way I had read to online. I cleaned everything up as best as possible - the hubs, rotor faces, back of the wheels, etc. Slipped these on, cranked them down to the factory specified 100 lb ft per lug in a star shaped pattern with my torque wrench. The front ones were a bit snug around the wheel hub, so I screwed the lugs onto the wheel spacer studs, gave them a little tap with the sledge and bolted the to the hubs, followed by the wheels. Also torqued to spec of course. Now, the stock studs stick out a bit passed the wheel spacer but the stock wheels have the cavities between the mounting holes and appear to measure 1/8" deeper then how much the studs stick out. The wheels appear perfectly flush with the spacer when mounted. Everything appears to fit perfect.
Unfortunately, Now I'm left with the worst vibration ever in what appears to be all 4 wheels... I contacted the wheel spacer manufacturer and they said to have the wheels properly balanced on a hunter gsp9700 road force balancer as wheel spacers can exacerbate previously un-noticed wheel vibration. Seemed like a valid possibility so I took them and had them properly balanced. Vibration unchanged. I removed the rear wheel spacers and that seemed to eliminate the vibration in the rear wheels but the steering wheel shakes so much that it seems to vibrate the whole car so its kinda hard to say for sure. Unfortunately I cant try taking off the front spacers as now I have the brembos back on and really don't want to go through that again unless I have to.
Am I missing something here or are these things just garbage? I did a bit of research and found somebody saying you needed to use the hub-centric type that h&r and eibach sell with the lip sticking out passed the wheel spacer center bore. Aren't the stock wheels lug-centric though? Isn't that why the lugs are taperd at the bottom as well as the wheel mounting holes? I mean technically these wheel spacers sit tight around the wheel hub center, so doesn't that technically line them up and make the "hub-centric" as the manufacturer claims? Would eliminating the second set of studs installed in the wheel spacers and installing longer studs to compensate fix this problem?
Help...
After finally deciding to ditch the knock off FR-500 that have been giving me hell with balancing from day one... I was left with the brembo clearance problem with my stock 18's. Obvious solution? 1" Wheel spacers... Seemed easy enough. Lots of people run them. I was going to pick up a set from american muscle but I wanted black, being that my rotor hubs are powder coated black and my wheels are painted black, I didn't want this sore thumb sandwiched in the middle. So I came across this set:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/380802961934?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1497.l2649
Perfect. Affordable, Black, and according to the item description - "hub centric"
So after a month of dealing with the god-awful stock 2 pistons I finally got these bad boys in the mail and got to work. I did everything the way I had read to online. I cleaned everything up as best as possible - the hubs, rotor faces, back of the wheels, etc. Slipped these on, cranked them down to the factory specified 100 lb ft per lug in a star shaped pattern with my torque wrench. The front ones were a bit snug around the wheel hub, so I screwed the lugs onto the wheel spacer studs, gave them a little tap with the sledge and bolted the to the hubs, followed by the wheels. Also torqued to spec of course. Now, the stock studs stick out a bit passed the wheel spacer but the stock wheels have the cavities between the mounting holes and appear to measure 1/8" deeper then how much the studs stick out. The wheels appear perfectly flush with the spacer when mounted. Everything appears to fit perfect.
Unfortunately, Now I'm left with the worst vibration ever in what appears to be all 4 wheels... I contacted the wheel spacer manufacturer and they said to have the wheels properly balanced on a hunter gsp9700 road force balancer as wheel spacers can exacerbate previously un-noticed wheel vibration. Seemed like a valid possibility so I took them and had them properly balanced. Vibration unchanged. I removed the rear wheel spacers and that seemed to eliminate the vibration in the rear wheels but the steering wheel shakes so much that it seems to vibrate the whole car so its kinda hard to say for sure. Unfortunately I cant try taking off the front spacers as now I have the brembos back on and really don't want to go through that again unless I have to.
Am I missing something here or are these things just garbage? I did a bit of research and found somebody saying you needed to use the hub-centric type that h&r and eibach sell with the lip sticking out passed the wheel spacer center bore. Aren't the stock wheels lug-centric though? Isn't that why the lugs are taperd at the bottom as well as the wheel mounting holes? I mean technically these wheel spacers sit tight around the wheel hub center, so doesn't that technically line them up and make the "hub-centric" as the manufacturer claims? Would eliminating the second set of studs installed in the wheel spacers and installing longer studs to compensate fix this problem?
Help...