"The stress on this and that is a bunch of nonsense but let's not get into that here"
Dear fellow members, please disregard this very misleading statement.
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In order to fit 15x9, +35mm wheels under the stock fenders required far more than just rolling and pulling but there might be an easier way though it would still not be that easy.
I cut and realigned the rear axle flanges which is a very serious effort and requires exacting workmanship to do it right and safely, even then it was a very tight fit in the rear with -1.9 camber and zero toe. I had to pull and roll as far as I could go and then remove the caulking on the seam between the fender and wheel well. Up front the wheels touched the BC struts on hard corners with really sticky tires, DIY 6061 aluminum 1.5mm spacers fixed that issue.
+35mm offset wheels are the best ones to go with in 15x9 that are available that I know of, custom offsets front and rear would be nice but $$$ and limit tire rotation options. IF, you could find something in +38 or so offset you would have to compensate up front with more spacer width to clear the struts but gain clearance in the rear.
Option 1:
The bolt on none ST rear axle comes with -1.5 camber though is a bit softer so a rear sway may be mandatory to use it, I do not use nor need one on my setup with 8k front and 7k rear Swift springs. (I actually modified a 5-way race grade rear sway bar from a prior BMW race car project, made mounts, etc then found I did not need it so did not even test it, stock front bar with adjustable end links and harder bushings used as well)
Fitting some 225 tires might work out and no so with others depending on how they are made, thick rim protector strips might get in the way, the Rival S has them on the outside and inside which I find really odd on the inside, why?
Option2:
Shims, problem is they have to be made exceptionally well, taper down very thin, two parts as inner and outer so the bolts line up without binding and they will push the wheels out further so more camber is needed and there is a point where you end up with to much rear camber.
Option3:
Flares, one has to do sheet body work and painting unless lifting the car up high for off road use
I would still keep the offset as high in number as I can to keep the geometry as correct as possible.
There was a very important reason I changed the camber that is really more important than fitting wider wheels. It was to compensate for the added front camber to keep the balance of the car where I wanted it. Just adding more front camber with so little rear camber can lead to an unstable car on very high speed corners. The safe way to build a fast race car, easiest to drive, faster lap times nearly always is going to happen with slight oversteer on slow speed corners, neutral on mid speed and slight understeer on high speed corners, not easy to achieve but the best one can do is the way to go.
I picked -2.5 front and -2.0 rear as what I considered optimal for street/track use, contact patch for acceleration and braking, tire wear and not having to change anything but damper settings. I have had to many cars requiring major changes between uses and I wanted a great all around setup and it worked out better than expected on this car I ended up with -1.9 in the rear which was well within what would work out and my car is amazing on track
Rick
Dear fellow members, please disregard this very misleading statement.
--------------------
In order to fit 15x9, +35mm wheels under the stock fenders required far more than just rolling and pulling but there might be an easier way though it would still not be that easy.
I cut and realigned the rear axle flanges which is a very serious effort and requires exacting workmanship to do it right and safely, even then it was a very tight fit in the rear with -1.9 camber and zero toe. I had to pull and roll as far as I could go and then remove the caulking on the seam between the fender and wheel well. Up front the wheels touched the BC struts on hard corners with really sticky tires, DIY 6061 aluminum 1.5mm spacers fixed that issue.
+35mm offset wheels are the best ones to go with in 15x9 that are available that I know of, custom offsets front and rear would be nice but $$$ and limit tire rotation options. IF, you could find something in +38 or so offset you would have to compensate up front with more spacer width to clear the struts but gain clearance in the rear.
Option 1:
The bolt on none ST rear axle comes with -1.5 camber though is a bit softer so a rear sway may be mandatory to use it, I do not use nor need one on my setup with 8k front and 7k rear Swift springs. (I actually modified a 5-way race grade rear sway bar from a prior BMW race car project, made mounts, etc then found I did not need it so did not even test it, stock front bar with adjustable end links and harder bushings used as well)
Fitting some 225 tires might work out and no so with others depending on how they are made, thick rim protector strips might get in the way, the Rival S has them on the outside and inside which I find really odd on the inside, why?
Option2:
Shims, problem is they have to be made exceptionally well, taper down very thin, two parts as inner and outer so the bolts line up without binding and they will push the wheels out further so more camber is needed and there is a point where you end up with to much rear camber.
Option3:
Flares, one has to do sheet body work and painting unless lifting the car up high for off road use
I would still keep the offset as high in number as I can to keep the geometry as correct as possible.
There was a very important reason I changed the camber that is really more important than fitting wider wheels. It was to compensate for the added front camber to keep the balance of the car where I wanted it. Just adding more front camber with so little rear camber can lead to an unstable car on very high speed corners. The safe way to build a fast race car, easiest to drive, faster lap times nearly always is going to happen with slight oversteer on slow speed corners, neutral on mid speed and slight understeer on high speed corners, not easy to achieve but the best one can do is the way to go.
I picked -2.5 front and -2.0 rear as what I considered optimal for street/track use, contact patch for acceleration and braking, tire wear and not having to change anything but damper settings. I have had to many cars requiring major changes between uses and I wanted a great all around setup and it worked out better than expected on this car I ended up with -1.9 in the rear which was well within what would work out and my car is amazing on track
Rick