BMWZ4MC said:
The spigot is to centre the wheel when fitting it. Compressive forces between wheel and hub are generated by the bolts and it’s friction at that interface that transmits drive to the road. The spigot doesn’t keep the wheel on the car.
I might be wrong (actually probably am) but I thought the idea of hubcentric (which these cars are, like most) is that they are not lugcentric, i.e must be centrally supported by the spigot. The wheel bolts are not designed to take the shear loads unless centrally located?
Either way, with a 5mm you will still be located on the spigot, but if your bolts decide to back out a touch say (has happened to me once upon a time), there's not a lot of meat left on the bone.
BMWZ4MC said:
As for 5mm spaces being poorly machined leading to imbalance, that risk is true of any spacer or wheel.
true, but I'd say the risk is higher with one that is not hubcentric. Say for instance the 5mm spacer hasn't been machined perfectly to ensure it is centered with equal distance around the hub and then slides over when tightening the bolts.
RedUn said:
I used to think that but some OEMs (Porsche) run a 5mm spacer from the factory
Do you know the depth of those spigots? Perhaps they are larger, I see talk of 7mm (not hubcentric) which would be pretty on the limit with these hubs.