Freedombyforce
Member
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2014
- Posts
- 48
- Reaction score
- 14
wow. ok. so you dont want the opinions of people who have actually gotten their trucks airborn. this is not about who has done it. you probably wont find anyone who has. the people who keep the truck on the street will put 20" rims on. the people who go offroad will stick with the 17" rim. logic really. taking that much tire away and trying to get air is most likely not going to end well. people tear out fender liners when getting air. why? because the tire compresses and gets wider and hits the liner. this amount of compression is what saves the rim from making contact with the ground. using a 20" rim means you have a lot less tire. you may get away with it a couple times, but in the end, it going to cause damage. also, what type of terrain you plan on jumping? dirt road? rocky high speed? off camber launch? sand dunes? these are all variables that have to be taken into consideration. and i would definitely listen to people opinions, especially if they have gotten airborn. they know what to expect and have done it successfully several times.
Well, I'm not interested in owners that have gotten their trucks airborne on stock wheels and tires because I've already done that myself. So tearing out fender liners is from 35 on 17's flaring out... Ok.. Have you seen a 35 on 20 not flare out and catastrophically break the wheel? This truck, like my Gen 1 Raptor is a daily driver/work truck. My offloading will be mostly very rough roads and launching over a cattle gap or two. I do not launch my daily driver 10'+ in the air.
---------- Post added at 10:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:59 PM ----------
Nobody really runs 20s and goes hard in the paint.
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Not really looking at going hard in the paint. Just rolling hard down a rough road and very occasionally getting all 4 off the ground.