Ed.Straker said:Google shows 1.1m entries for cracked 326m wheels so I would suspect ‘a bad batch’ is a bit of an euphemism
MACK said:The fronts are alot less prone to cracking apparently so you could run 4 of those as an alternative. Thats how mine came. It only makes about 1mm of difference to the how far the wheels poke out. You can run a 255 tyre, thats how mine came and looks ok, but technically its a bit wide on an 8" wide rim so i'd probably only go to a 245
The 35i that we inherited from Bob came with 326s and runflats that had covered 11,000 miles. No cracks, perfect condition.Zed Baron said:Not defending the 326 alloy here... but I've had them on my E89 for 7 years without issue (touch wood and probably jinxed them now) replaced 296's which are also prone to cracking. I fancied buying a set of 19" 295's, but nearly every set of pre-owned ones I looked at the rears had been welded. So is it the case that all large BMW alloys are prone to cracking?
Mercs are just as bad. So are Mazda mx5s, Porkers, you name it. Look up 100 reg numbers on Autotrader cars on MOT history checks, it is amazing how many (mainly German) cars have (or had) cracked alloys.Nictrix said:A friend has a C43 with 19" wheels and one of his wheels has cracked 3 times. Its not just BMW.
The profile "number" is slightly irrelevant, as it is the percentage of the overall width of the tyre. Therefore on a 326 front with a 225mm width tyre, the 30 is 30% of 225 (67.5mm), whereas the rears being 255, it's 30% of that (76.5mm). So it can't be related to the thin profile, otherwise the fronts would suffer more? It has to be to do with the width of the wheel itself which makes sense as there is more unsupported structure.brillomaster said:Edit to add - looks like the largest wheel Mercedes offered on a c class of a similar year was an 18". Audi offered a 19" wheel on the A4, but that ran a relatively chunky 255/35/R19 tyre, whereas BMWs were on 255/30/R19.
Pondrew said:The profile "number" is slightly irrelevant, as it is the percentage of the overall width of the tyre. Therefore on a 326 front with a 225mm width tyre, the 30 is 30% of 225 (67.5mm), whereas the rears being 255, it's 30% of that (76.5mm). So it can't be related to the thin profile, otherwise the fronts would suffer more? It has to be to do with the width of the wheel itself which makes sense as there is more unsupported structure.brillomaster said:Edit to add - looks like the largest wheel Mercedes offered on a c class of a similar year was an 18". Audi offered a 19" wheel on the A4, but that ran a relatively chunky 255/35/R19 tyre, whereas BMWs were on 255/30/R19.
Fair play (I didn't check)Ed.Straker said:Not quite correct..on the E89 the fronts are one click up on profile size eg 35 front / 30 rear so the ‘meat’ is the sane height.
Pondrew said:Fair play (I didn't check)Ed.Straker said:Not quite correct..on the E89 the fronts are one click up on profile size eg 35 front / 30 rear so the ‘meat’ is the sane height.Probably just down to manufacturers sourcing their wheels from "Franz's cheap wheels of Munich", who have cnc milling machines set with a given program running 24/7 and getting 30 euros a piece for them.
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Pondrew said:Fair play (I didn't check)Ed.Straker said:Not quite correct..on the E89 the fronts are one click up on profile size eg 35 front / 30 rear so the ‘meat’ is the sane height.Probably just down to manufacturers sourcing their wheels from "Franz's cheap wheels of Munich", who have cnc milling machines set with a given program running 24/7 and getting 30 euros a piece for them.
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Pondrew said:I just checked mine, just to be sure![]()
Some stupid f*cker has put the WRONG size tyres on the rears of mine!![]()
I have 225/35/19 88Y Bridgestone Potenzas on the front and 255/35/19 92Y same on the rears! That means the rolling radius is way out between front and rear (nearly 10mm). Circumference difference is 65mm front to back.
mr wilks said:Why is it "wrong " ?
Bmw no longer fit 255 30 19 tyres so perhaps they realised they were pretty much alone amongst the other German manufacturers fitting 255 30 19 to a 9j rim .
You clearly haven't felt any noticeable impairment to handling ( why would you ) & another benefit along with comfort & wheel protection is the speedo will now be more accurate .
mr wilks said:another benefit along with comfort & wheel protection is the speedo will now be more accurate .
SV8Predator said:mr wilks said:another benefit along with comfort & wheel protection is the speedo will now be more accurate .
The higher rolling radius from factory spec makes the speedo more accurate? Explain!