What is the purpose for changing the wheels? Are you pimping a minivan?
Wirelessly posted (sent from a smartphone. )
Make sure its similar radius tires as stock so it doesnt rub the wheel wells if ur gonna drop it down. Also make sure its not too wide either.
Also narrow tires in front and wider in rear wouldnt be a good idea cuz it would be difficult to rotate tires of same size.
authentic said:Wirelessly posted (sent from a smartphone. )
Make sure its similar radius tires as stock so it doesnt rub the wheel wells if ur gonna drop it down. Also make sure its not too wide either.
Also narrow tires in front and wider in rear wouldnt be a good idea cuz it would be difficult to rotate tires of same size.
yeah, very true, but i would involve modding 2011 sienna competition and get prizes in cash so i can afford new tires every 20k miles lol
What is the purpose for changing the wheels? Are you pimping a minivan?

it's so..... Californian of them to do such silly thing to their cars :roll:
![]()
Wirelessly posted (sent from a smartphone. )
Make sure its similar radius tires as stock so it doesnt rub the wheel wells if ur gonna drop it down. Also make sure its not too wide either.
Also narrow tires in front and wider in rear wouldnt be a good idea cuz it would be difficult to rotate tires of same size.
Total agree with you.....more rubbing the areas like you says wheel wells... the front struts where the oversize or wider (maybe offset rims?) tires can rub the bottom of the cup ( support the coil spring end).
If you want the 20 inch rims, then original Sienna tire diameter and wide should be remain same. I think they are ok but make sure the 20 inch rims have the correct offsets (negative or positive offset) to match your Sienna.
naisho said:search it up for real results, yeah, it's similar. :P
![]()
Also different size cause error MPH and probably poor fuel economy.
I've never heard of that... Stereotype? It's more NJ/NY thing. Or Atlanta.
that's what melt mod is for.Make sure its similar radius tires as stock so it doesnt rub the wheel wells if ur gonna drop it down.
that's what spacer is for.Also make sure its not too wide either.
true but... a lot of sport cars are narrow in front and wide in back like my parents' BMW.Also narrow tires in front and wider in rear wouldnt be a good idea cuz it would be difficult to rotate tires of same size.
MPG decrease should not be drastic. Theoretically speaking, he would probably lose 1-2 miles per every 1inch to wheel size gained. Tires are more important, the revolutions per min is what calculates mpg loss.
Example, Cooper Tire Starfire SF340 Tire from Market Tire Company
Cooper Starfire SF30
16" and 17" calculation
16" revs per mile (cooper site info) = 777
17" rev per mile = 759
777 - 759 = 18 rev difference, 18/777 = 2.32% difference
Assume he gets 300 miles per trip on 17". 300 * 1.0232% = 306.96 miles on 16"
Finally, to get mpg, I don't know sienna's tank size, but I assume 19.5 gal like some toyotas.
17" 300mi / 19.5 gal = 15.38 mpg
16" 306.96mi / 19.5 gal = 15.74 mpg
difference % is still 2.32 (constant). Real world will differ, but this is theoretical calculation not factoring driving habits, just tire/wheel size and revolutions per mile alone.
search it up for real results, yeah, it's similar. :P
![]()