• Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.

Wheel spacers ?


Mickey Bitsko

Well-Known Member
U.S. Military - Veteran
Joined
Mar 3, 2014
Messages
405
City
Pagosa Springs CO>
Vehicle Year
2000
Transmission
Automatic
My credo
live everyday like your gonna die tomorrow
Are there any advantages/disadvantages to wheel spacers ? Are they hard on the spindles etc?
Are they JUST for looks or do they serve a purpose?

Thanks for any input ..
 
They move your wheels out and help with using wheels that are not ideal for your vehicle.

Can be harder on the wheel bearings depending on how big of a spacer and wheel offset. Another thing to come loose.

Generally frowned apoun because of the coming loose part, some find that offensive. :icon_surprised:
 
I spaced-out :icon_twisted: to improve handling a bit, wider is more stable, and the stock width is a bit narrow to me. I run close to a stock tire and don't feel it is too much stress on it. The spacers are cheep compared to a new set of wheels and I like the Explorer Limited rims I am running now. I am sure there is a bit more stress on all the steering stuff, bearings, springs etc., but these are truck components and made stronger.

I ran spacers on a wheeler, wider is more stable, probably a good idea as you lift higher, and it allowed me to run wider tires without rubbing or buying new rims. That said I also had one ton axles to take the extra abuse. Large wheels on small axles are going to cause more problems and wear.

If you think spacers are going to come loose then you should also be torquing your wheels frequently. I have not had them come loose once torqued and then retorqued properly.

Spacers less than 1 1/2" will require you to trim wheel lugs. Then you are stuck with them or get to install new lugs. The wider you go and the larger tire you go with probably means more parts and repairs over the miles. Well, unless you spend the money up front to go big enough with the running gear so it will hold-up.

Wider also cuts the spring rate. The extra length of the torque arm gives 1 1/2" spacers about 7% more torque against the front T-bar spring or reduces spring rate that much. 235lb "A" T-bars become 217lb.

I feel in both cases my old wheeler and now with my Ranger that they helped improve what I was after, stability and were much less expensive than new rims. You got money to blow on rims get the backspace or offset you want in the rim.

I recently researched this before I put them on.....................working on the book now.
 
Last edited:
My rims were $75 at a swap meet and look a heck of a lot better than the stock 6" wide "white sport wheels".

Never been around spacers and probably never will.
 
My rims were $75 at a swap meet and look a heck of a lot better than the stock 6" wide "white sport wheels".

Never been around spacers and probably never will.

:dunno:whatever, If you get stuck being around them I hope nothing bad happens to you.:D

My rims are stock 2001 Explorer Limited 16" alloys and I wanted to keep them. I like them, nice rims.

I got no problem having used spacers on two vehicles now and would do it again. That said I have not gone over an inch and a half to keep it relatively safe. IMHO the wider track is safer as these rigs have a narrow track and I am sure that contributes to rollover......................What's safer, no spacer, or spacers that widen the track? I simply make sure they are properly torqued each time I have the wheels rotated and balanced. I have not found them to be loose once they were torqued twice.

As you know many run larger wheels and tires which has got to put more stress on than me running 255/70's with 1 1/2" spacers.
 
Mine is going to the '93+ width ('96 Ex 8.8, '95 Ranger D35) and my sawblade wheels have a tad more than the usual offset.

Actually kinda nervous about how the front is going to look with the D35 because I love the proportions the front has right now.

I see no problem with a small offset like you have, some guys want huge ones to run more modern FWD type wheels... that is what makes me really queasy.
 
Or you could just get wheels with the back spacing you want? :dunno:
 
I'm planning on running wheel spacers on the rear of my Explorer build for two reasons, I'll be running a full width axle up front so it'll need to be wider, and I'll be adapting from 5 on 4.5 to 5 on 5.5 bolt pattern in the rear... but I'll be staying as thin of spacers as I can for the reasons stated above.
 

Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad

TRS Events

Member & Vendor Upgrades

For a small yearly donation, you can support this forum and receive a 'Supporting Member' banner, or become a 'Supporting Vendor' and promote your products here. Click the banner to find out how.

Latest posts

Recently Featured

Want to see your truck here? Share your photos and details in the forum.

Ranger Adventure Video

TRS Merchandise

Follow TRS On Instagram

TRS Sponsors


Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad


Amazon Deals

Sponsored Ad

Back
Top