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you don't have to go "full" lock ,.I already put 265/75/16 but the issue that on full lock the tire touch the sway bar and making vibrations.
i used the narrow nuts to hold spacer to truck,. and factory wheel nuts to hold the wheel onHub centric
Hub centric
@Supercharged111
Percentage and ratings... there's always a difference in ratings, isn't there? If an axle is rated to carry X, it must be actually capable of a percentage more, for sake of arguement. say 20%? Like if the axle is good to about 7200 lbs, it will carry a 6000 lb rating, right?
Then Load E tires are rated to 3280lbs, added up over 6k.
Since the inner surface of the spacer indexes onto the OE hub, then the wheel is on the outer hub as the OE wheel does. Expecting the spacer is flat and directly mounted against the drum/rotor/hub, and the (quantity 16) 10.9 studs are torqued correctly. I suspect every bit of 6k, if not 7.
That being said hub-centric is far more preferable than lug-centric.
Plus what holds the wheel on, is the contact of the hub, plus the tapered lug nut, in the tapered seat in the wheel, and the proper torque of the lug nuts.
Caveat: I've never researched nor contacted any manufacturers for their actual ratings and I've never used them on a vehicle I intended on carrying maximum weight, merely for track width correction, esthetics, visual appeal.
I have seen dealership equipped Rocky Ridge lifted dually with lug-centric spacers on full float axles. Per warranty requirements, if it's sold at the dealership new, it's warrantied. I'm naively doubtful multiple dealerships across the country would honor said warranty without assurances it was strong enough for hard use.
that ring of aluminum is awfully thin and can't hold a candle to what the wheel centers itself on from the factory.
Run that truck with loose lugs and kiss that ring goodbye.
Even the steel ones don't have that thick of a ring, it's all lug studs holding the weight up. With that said, there's little point in prioritizing a hub centric spacer unless someone out there is making them with some properly thick lips.
True, agreed.
It would be an issue IF the lug nuts were loose and the wheel rode ON that centric ring. No, its there to properly center the wheel, and the lug nuts do the job of making the tire, wheel, spacer, hub flange, and bearing races into a single piece of rotating mass
Again true, and agreed.
So... don't drive around with loose lug nuts?
LOL. I don't think that ring is doing anything.
I have some steel 1.5" spacers destined for the plow truck (rear only) and the lips on those rusted off.
The full float axle can't use hub-centric spacers as they interfere with the floating hub. Same problem if lug nuts are loose.
Which is strange, here in New Yuck we use tons of road salt and my 8 year old alloy spacers are still clean and very much usable. Do you not wash off said salt or do you pour salt directly on them?