I don't know if anyone has posted these up anywhere else (in one post.....) The specs should be the same worldwide, but I've thrown it up in the Australian section just in case.
PCD = 5 x 114.3mm
Wheel nut = 12 x 1.25mm conical seat
Hub centrebore measured at 60.05mm (using vernier calipers) - supplied hub rings with aftermarket alloy wheels are 60.1mm
17x7" +50mm offset (Taken off 2011 Touring factory alloy - see below)
Wheel/tyre weight (brand new Yokohama dB E70 215/55 fitted to 17" factory alloy) = 21.0kg (using my bathroom digital scales with 0.5kg resolution)
Factory Alloy Wheel Specifications
Sorry not an expert on Wheels so I can't tell you much.
My car seats on 18 inch' 20 spoke wheels. A tech saw my rims and noted that there are a lot of balancing weights on the rims. He thinks that compare to other rims the Kizashi OEM rim seem to have a lot of these weights. And usually that means the wheel has some balancing issues.
What do you think.
My car seats on 18 inch' 20 spoke wheels. A tech saw my rims and noted that there are a lot of balancing weights on the rims. He thinks that compare to other rims the Kizashi OEM rim seem to have a lot of these weights. And usually that means the wheel has some balancing issues.
What do you think.
2011 Mineral Grey Kizashi Prestige
I would tend to buy in to that. I put new tires on the Kiz last fall and the balance isn't as good as the factory balance. Factory was smooth as silk. And as you have mentioned, the new balance has far fewer, and larger weights. Along with that comes a very slight vibe to the car at highway speed. Noticed it right away, but that seems typical after I get a new set of tires. So slight that it's not worth the aggravation of forcing them to redo it especially around where I live. I've taken notice that factory balance always seems better to me. No one takes the time required and/or don't have the best equipment and/or neglect said equipment's servicing and calibration.
I once had a set of Pirelli Scorpions on the Suburban years ago that NEVER balanced right, as in shake your teeth out of you head at 65-70mph. Some tires are really just that bad.
I once had a set of Pirelli Scorpions on the Suburban years ago that NEVER balanced right, as in shake your teeth out of you head at 65-70mph. Some tires are really just that bad.
Ron
2010 Kizashi GTS, CVT, iAWD (3/10 build date)
2011 SX4 Premium Hatch, CVT, iAWD (12/10 build date)
2018 Mazda CX-5 iAWD Touring
2014 Wrangler JKUW (GONE, traded )
1991 Samurai, 5-Speed, EFI, Soft-Top ( sold)
2010 Kizashi GTS, CVT, iAWD (3/10 build date)
2011 SX4 Premium Hatch, CVT, iAWD (12/10 build date)
2018 Mazda CX-5 iAWD Touring
2014 Wrangler JKUW (GONE, traded )
1991 Samurai, 5-Speed, EFI, Soft-Top ( sold)
Were they balancing it without a tyre fitted? Otherwise my guess would be the tyre was the cause, not the rim.suzboy wrote:Sorry not an expert on Wheels so I can't tell you much.
My car seats on 18 inch' 20 spoke wheels. A tech saw my rims and noted that there are a lot of balancing weights on the rims. He thinks that compare to other rims the Kizashi OEM rim seem to have a lot of these weights. And usually that means the wheel has some balancing issues.
What do you think.
David
21.0kg with brand new tyre - see the first post which I've updated. I might be able to give the rim weight in the near future depending on what I decide to do with my stock tyres.BM-Power wrote:Any ideas on what's the weight of a 17" stock rim (excluding tyre)?
Cheers
David
This is long delayed, but I have a bare 17" OEM wheel that I picked up as a replacement for some curb damage, and I figured I would check the weight while I had the chance.BM-Power wrote:Any ideas on what's the weight of a 17" stock rim (excluding tyre)?
Cheers
(Drum roll) The bare weight of the 17" Kizashi wheel is approximately 22.8 lbs, or 10.4 kg for those living in the civilized world.
Thank you! (from the uncivilized USA )bdleonard wrote:This is long delayed, but I have a bare 17" OEM wheel that I picked up as a replacement for some curb damage, and I figured I would check the weight while I had the chance.
(Drum roll) The bare weight of the 17" Kizashi wheel is approximately 22.8 lbs, or 10.4 kg for those living in the civilized world.