What's the Fascination?
#11
Some people love the lifted off-road look, some love a lowered street truck look, personally I'm a fan of both so long as it's well executed. For someone that doesn't go offroading 20's work very well on our trucks when going for a street truck look. Lower profile sidewalls are stiffer and help a little on the handling and if the truck is lowered upsizing the rims almost always helps the look (within reason of course).
You can fit 265/50R20 tires on these trucks with no rubbing, that's over 5" of sidewall. In my mind at least that's more than enough to protect the rims from on road hazards, especially with tires designed to carry the weight of trucks and SUVs (of course I don't fall into the group that aims for every pothole in the road either). Personally I can't stand to see rim/tire combinations that end up with skinny rubber band tires but you can definitely set up a 20" rim/tire combination that fits on our trucks and gives a healthy looking sidewall ratio.
You can fit 265/50R20 tires on these trucks with no rubbing, that's over 5" of sidewall. In my mind at least that's more than enough to protect the rims from on road hazards, especially with tires designed to carry the weight of trucks and SUVs (of course I don't fall into the group that aims for every pothole in the road either). Personally I can't stand to see rim/tire combinations that end up with skinny rubber band tires but you can definitely set up a 20" rim/tire combination that fits on our trucks and gives a healthy looking sidewall ratio.
#12
I have 265/50r20's and i think they look good any bigger in rim and it would look stupid. I like both lifted and lowered truck if they are built/driven right. For example i went to the lake monday and all the lifted trucks with swampers on them parked in the gravel at the boat launch.... Me and a 2wd S10 had to park in the mud. Just my .02
#14
Some people love the lifted off-road look, some love a lowered street truck look, personally I'm a fan of both so long as it's well executed. For someone that doesn't go offroading 20's work very well on our trucks when going for a street truck look. Lower profile sidewalls are stiffer and help a little on the handling and if the truck is lowered upsizing the rims almost always helps the look (within reason of course).
You can fit 265/50R20 tires on these trucks with no rubbing, that's over 5" of sidewall. In my mind at least that's more than enough to protect the rims from on road hazards, especially with tires designed to carry the weight of trucks and SUVs (of course I don't fall into the group that aims for every pothole in the road either). Personally I can't stand to see rim/tire combinations that end up with skinny rubber band tires but you can definitely set up a 20" rim/tire combination that fits on our trucks and gives a healthy looking sidewall ratio.
You can fit 265/50R20 tires on these trucks with no rubbing, that's over 5" of sidewall. In my mind at least that's more than enough to protect the rims from on road hazards, especially with tires designed to carry the weight of trucks and SUVs (of course I don't fall into the group that aims for every pothole in the road either). Personally I can't stand to see rim/tire combinations that end up with skinny rubber band tires but you can definitely set up a 20" rim/tire combination that fits on our trucks and gives a healthy looking sidewall ratio.
#15