Originally Posted by
AndreasTire on stock 200SX SER B14
195/55/15 gives you a tire dia of 23.44
( tire dia )23.44 - 15 ( rim dia ) = 8.44 of tire on both sides
8.44 / 2 = 4.22
This means you rim to road thickness is 4.22 inches
These are the tires you have considered
225/50/17 tires give you a dia of 25.86 ( On car now ) 4.43 tire to raod clearance
225/45/17 tires give you a dia of 24.97 ( This Size comes on a 04-07 Subaru STI ) 4.0 tore to road clearance
225/40/17 tires give you a dia of 24.09
Bellow are the tires that come on the 3.5L Maxima 2004
245/45/18 tires give you a dia of 26.68 ( SE Maxima ) 4.34 tire to road clearance
225/55/17 tires give you a dia of 26.74 ( SL Maxima ) 4.87 tire to road clearance
Now as you know the SE is the sport handling model and as we know less tire to road clearance will make the car handle better but give you a more harsh ride. ( way over exagerated as I am sure you dont here people in Maxima SEs complaining about this.
First off here is my opinion on your tire option of 225/50/17. This tire option is way off. If you look at the Maxima you will notice a heavier car can have more side wall to eat up the extra weight of the car going over bumps. The Maxima is about 500 pounds heavier than your car. Less weigh on your car can have less tire to road clearance while and having the same driver comfort.
I would go with
235/40/18 gives you a tire dia of 25.40 = tire to road clearance of 3.70
This tire would have way better handling characteristics and better 1/4 mile tracktion. Kumho Exta MX $135 each. I would get the Brigstone Potenza RE01R, best tire I ever had, I had these on my STI, but at $245 can be a little scary on the pocket.
If your car understeers then you have some choices you can do to get this fixed.
1. run a tire that is stickier up front. ( less skidding in front )
2. run higher tire presures out back. ( will induce tire slipage out back to neutralize car )
3. run stiffer springs out back
4. run a swaybar or larger sway bar on the back
Thats all I got.
Thanks for your input, Miko. Here's my take on some of the things you've mentioned.
My tires, in general have about the same sidewall thickness as stock. Quite honestly, I'm not sure but a Stock Sentra might understeer LESS (although I am basing my problems off an already stiff suspension, so I could be wrong). The extra sidewall causes excessive lateral movement in the car in relation to the road contact. I may consider lower profiles next time, like 225/45 or 225/40.
I don't want to go with 18s, 17s are already too big for me and the only 16's that clear my brakes are no longer in production. I wish for 16s, because I want to take my car to the strip from time to time and I need slicks.
Anyhow, I disagree a little about the higher tire pressure. In a straight line, lower tire pressure increases your footprint, but in corners, your tire rolls over itself onto the sidewall causing LESS traction. Increasing my rear tire pressure would only cause them to grip more, unless I went to a ridiculously high pressure and blew them up like a balloon.
Right now, here are the options on my list:
Smaller tires (to lower the car)
sandbag the engine bay to see if it's more of a traction issue than a weight distru. issue.
sandbag the trunk to see if it is a weight distru. issue
Ikea brace behind the rear seats.
Weld my current Progress Suspension sway bar (make it a double sway bar).
Bend the rear beam
My biggest fear is not that there's too much or too little weight in the front, but that the weight is way too far off the ground. Either because the engine is a V6, or because the car is set too high, or such.