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Uhhh, 205 and 235 are the width of the tire. 75 is the height. Jumping from 205 to 235 only changes the foot print of the tire. Wheel height and rim diameter change speedometer accuracy. If you jumped from 75 to 85 or to 55 OR of jumped from a 15 in rim to a 16 or a 20 inch rim, then speedometer gears would need to be changed. Only tire height and rim diameter change accuracy. Tire width just puts more rubber touching the pavement.
Quote from: LTZ C20 on July 02, 2016, 10:26:41 pmUhhh, 205 and 235 are the width of the tire. 75 is the height. Jumping from 205 to 235 only changes the foot print of the tire. Wheel height and rim diameter change speedometer accuracy. If you jumped from 75 to 85 or to 55 OR of jumped from a 15 in rim to a 16 or a 20 inch rim, then speedometer gears would need to be changed. Only tire height and rim diameter change accuracy. Tire width just puts more rubber touching the pavement.205's are much shorter than 235's. 75 is the width... sorry
205's are much shorter than 235's. 75 is the width... sorry
Quote from: zieg85 on July 02, 2016, 11:48:35 pm205's are much shorter than 235's. 75 is the width... sorryNot sure who your talking to Zieg. Me or the OP.To the OP, tire measurements using the metric standard, the way you listed, (205/75/15).205 - is the width of the tire (in millimeters) across the middle of the tread area, sidewall to sidewall.75 - is the aspect ration, which overall relates to the height of the tire from the bead seat to the tread area.15 - rim diameter in inches.Measuring a tire width in the standard format (33x8 - 15) yields different measurement which isn't anything you need to worry about as you listed your tires in the metric format.Think of it like this. 205 being the width would be like the width of your foot from your big toe to your pinky toe. It does not affect your foot length, just how wide your foot print is. 75 would be your foot length from toe tips to heel. That being shorter or longer changes how much distance one step would cover.
I noticed that whenever I drive Ol' Rusty (1986 C10 Silverado) around the yard the speedo seems to be 'wobbling' as it registers the speed, its not bouncing around like crazy as the needle is moving like it should but it wobbles back and forth as it goes making it difficult to tell the actual speed while going along. I'm thinking it might be a worn out speedo gear or cable....
I noticed that whenever I drive Ol' Rusty (1986 C10 Silverado) around the yard the speedo seems to the 'wobbling' as it registers the speed, its not bouncing around like crazy as the needle is moving like it should but it wobbles back and forth as it goes making it difficult to tell the actual speed while going along. I'm thinking it might be a worn out speedo gear or cable oh and how do you do the math to get yourself the correct tooth gear? Rusty originally came with 205/75r/15's where as I currently have 235/75r/15's (gives it a bit more ground clearance) so would the bigger tire affect the speedo much?