These bolt on wheel spacers are designed to give you a little more width without changing out your axle for a wider one. Great for use on solid axles conversions to make the front axle similar in width the wider rear axle found on 86 and up Toyota trucks. Bolt pattern is 6 stud on a 5.5" PCD.
Features safety graded studs and matching nuts for proper fit. Made from Billet 6061-T6 aluminum. Grade 8 Studs, Grade 10.9 nuts. Shipped as a pair of spacers w/nuts.
20mm is the maximum thickness you can get certed, unless the spacer is to effect a change in stud pattern, in which case it can be 27mm thick. http://www.lvvta.org.nz/stdWheels&Tyres.pdf
'85 Hilux crawler, 3rz, duals, 4.7's, 4.88's, ARB's, 30 spline Longfields, 6 stud SNR4x4 Histeer, Airshocks up front, coiled rear, 40" Iroks.
^^^this shite is all about to change....^^^
have they changed it again?it used to be 25mm bolt ons where fine for certification?dam if these aint legal i may have to cancel that hold on the set of 4 jafa cos these where going on a road legel truck
1990 surf 350 chevy jacked up and currently under construction again
muddyhilux wrote:have they changed it again?it used to be 25mm bolt ons where fine for certification?dam if these aint legal i may have to cancel that hold on the set of 4 jafa cos these where going on a road legel truck
Double check with your certifier
'85 Hilux crawler, 3rz, duals, 4.7's, 4.88's, ARB's, 30 spline Longfields, 6 stud SNR4x4 Histeer, Airshocks up front, coiled rear, 40" Iroks.
^^^this shite is all about to change....^^^
yeh ill call him in the morning,when i talked to him re these for my truck a year ago it was sweet,but yeh,lvvc change thier mind faster than i can eat a double scoop chocolated dipped with sprinkles ice cream from mr wippy and thats dam fast
1990 surf 350 chevy jacked up and currently under construction again
What kind of strain would these put on everything else? And also can someone tell me if these would be equivalent of an ifs hub swap on a solid axle surf? Trailer my mud tyres everywhere so no major for the road legalness.
just xtra pressure on bearings as the force is inlarged by the wheel having more leverage due to being further from axis,i think that made sense and yes i do belive it is the same
1990 surf 350 chevy jacked up and currently under construction again
muddyhilux wrote:just xtra pressure on bearings as the force is inlarged by the wheel having more leverage due to being further from axis,i think that made sense and yes i do belive it is the same
nope the ifs spacer shifts the disc no extra pressure to the bearings etc
swb lux with 7mge, trailgear crossover, trailgear rear lift kit, custom front bar, runva 1200lb winch, custom snorkel, 37" Mtrs, custom deck, lockright in the rear.
muddyhilux wrote:hi all,just been in touch with certifyer and has confirmed for me 20mm "slip on" spacers,ie not bolted on are maximum,however when u go to the adaptor style,ie bolt the spacer on then bolt rim to spacer on 2nd set of studs your allowed 27mm for road only vechiles and 25mm for track / road cars,thats y everyone makes 25mm adapotors because theyre more likley to be brought by someone for track car and 2mm is piss all
hope that clears it up but as always check with your specific certifyer as not all guys are the same
After re-reading the lvvta document, I think this is correct, but it pays to check with your cert guy first
'85 Hilux crawler, 3rz, duals, 4.7's, 4.88's, ARB's, 30 spline Longfields, 6 stud SNR4x4 Histeer, Airshocks up front, coiled rear, 40" Iroks.
^^^this shite is all about to change....^^^
Jafa wrote:These bolt on wheel spacers are designed to give you a little more width without changing out your axle for a wider one. Great for use on solid axles conversions to make the front axle similar in width the wider rear axle found on 86 and up Toyota trucks. Bolt pattern is 6 stud on a 5.5" PCD.
Features safety graded studs and matching nuts for proper fit. Made from Billet 6061-T6 aluminum. Grade 8 Studs, Grade 10.9 nuts. Shipped as a pair of spacers w/nuts.
Just fitted my 50mm spacers today, had them sitting in the shed for a couple of weeks , you know walk past give them a pat.. Arrived look as good as the pictures everything fitted damm good product and I couldn't make them for the price that I purchased them for.
I don't think you will find spacers like the bolt on ones for 15mm. As the nut needs to be rebated into the spacer. The thinnest is 25mm... Other option is to use a packer... May need longer wheel studs. Also from memory the packer needs to be retained on the hub or wheel....
i bourt a set of 25mm afew months ago from a guy in palmerston north he tald me i didnt need to get a cert and i put them on my truck last months went to get a wof and they said i needed to get it cert so im seeling them i payed $220 for them.i want $150 for them if any 1 keen send me a pm
You used to be able to fit wheel adapters.. But the new WOF rules state any spacers / adapters need cert now. Have a read of the rules out as of April 2011
bigboar357 wrote:i bourt a set of 25mm afew months ago from a guy in palmerston north he tald me i didnt need to get a cert and i put them on my truck last months went to get a wof and they said i needed to get it cert so im seeling them i payed $220 for them.i want $150 for them if any 1 keen send me a pm
Take them off an get your wof then put them back on??
Fakey wrote:Take them off an get your wof then put them back on??
The only problem with that is... You get in a road accident.... Car is inspected and spacers found not certified... No insurance......Plus other fines. Even if you are in the right...
Fakey wrote:Take them off an get your wof then put them back on??
The only problem with that is... You get in a road accident.... Car is inspected and spacers found not certified... No insurance......Plus other fines. Even if you are in the right...
Calvin
Are you sure? This is only what ive been told by an ex insurance assessor but to not pay out theyd have to prove that the wheelspacers contributed to the accident in some way
Fakey wrote:Take them off an get your wof then put them back on??
The only problem with that is... You get in a road accident.... Car is inspected and spacers found not certified... No insurance......Plus other fines. Even if you are in the right...
Calvin
Are you sure? This is only what ive been told by an ex insurance assessor but to not pay out theyd have to prove that the wheelspacers contributed to the accident in some way
yep if u have them on and you have a accident and they on there and they not cert you dont get no insurance.i asked a friend who wife works for a insurance place.they wont pay out if they find anything rong or not ment to be on there without being cert