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18 answers

Harsh ride and forget about 4x4ing....you will toast those rims unless you jack up your Suburban to fit a minimum 35" tires on your ride!

I would stick with stock 16's or bump it up to 18's for all-terrain tire availability and add yourself some 33's or 35"s on some Mickey Thompson MTZ's.

2007-01-15 10:58:23 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well from someone who recked a 2002 with 22 inch rims. Let me say bad idea. Looks great but messed with the whole ride. Braking, acceleration, and cornering. I had 22 inch rims with 40's. But again looks great but balancing issues developed. But in the end you are going to decide what's worth it. I thought it was a good idea but now will think twice. I assume this is a 2 wheel drive??

2007-01-15 17:55:49 · answer #2 · answered by Jeremy 1 · 0 0

They dont make 4 lug 22" rims. 22" rims are made to support heavy loads. Which brings the question are you just plain retarded? WHY do you people insist raising cars to monster truck heights to fit $10,000 rims on $1,000 cars? You do realize EVERYBODY laughs at this right? It has to be the stupidest fad since the people wear the pants by their knees and have to hold them up while they walk like a damn penguin. Stupidity overruns itself in our society already, why add to it? But withoout lifting you car AT LEAST 12 inches you could never fit them on. You cannot turn because the 22" rims are at least 10 inches wide, creating a radius problem to where all you could turn your wheel is about 7-8 degrees. To put this in perspective the average turn on a car is 33 degrees. You could not make a right or left turn at a light or stop sign without pulling out into the other lanes of traffic, and forget about pulling into a parking space. IDIOTS

2016-03-17 23:56:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Raise the ride height...I suggest air suspension...this is going to be for 2 mph driving...not performance...dudes are putting 24 and 26's on Caprices and Impalas now....just like the game changed from deuce coupes and lead sleds to fastbacks and wedge shapes...from 15 and 16 inch hubcabs to 17 and 18 inch Cragars or Torque Thrust's...Europeans brought 19 inch rims to the game with the Benzes and Bimmers in the late 80's/early 90's...then the 20's came...the pro style modification with air ride and metallic paint....why all the animousity?....this used to be reserved for lowriders ...sitting on 13 inch Daytons and Vogues...the old school hotrodders...called it blashermy...but the Chicanos in LA..keep the spirit of 50's and 60's hotrodding alive....the pimping out of the ride is just a another faucet of car costumizing....the SUV's are just like those 70's vans with CB radios,shag carpet, murals, and stained glass side windows...part of problem is the fact that Hip Hop culture help make this popular...the Euros and Tuners embraced this...the car companies are making cars so that they can sit on 19's and 20's without modifications.

2007-01-17 07:34:37 · answer #4 · answered by D.E.O.N. Sphinxxx 4 · 0 0

Just cause you can doesn't mean you should. Saw a Hummer with 22 inch rims today....I didn't know whether to laugh or throw up!!! Why anyone would want that hideous look for their ride is beyond me. Do what you want...I'll carry a barf bag with me....just in case I see your Suburban on the street.

2007-01-16 07:01:00 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

22 Inch Vogue Tires

2016-10-01 00:18:47 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Vehicles are made to ride with the stock rim and tire sizes. That is what the shocks and suspension are set for.
Changing the size will completely mess up the ride of your vehicle.

2007-01-15 10:48:25 · answer #7 · answered by Ron Porkmore 4 · 0 0

it will make the ride more bumpy. I have 18's on an Eclipse with small tires. With the 22's, you will have less sidewall to absorb the bumps. If you are concerned about your ride quality, but really want aftermarket wheels, try maybe 18 or 20in wheels, as they will ride better.

2007-01-15 10:48:12 · answer #8 · answered by Kelly J 1 · 0 0

All big rims with low profile tires ride like you have no shocks or springs. Its like riding in a shopping cart..... and wait till it rains and snows..... better get a good warm pair of boots for when it sits stuck in the snow, and then slides off the road into a ditch when it rains. Great idea low profile tires with no tread......

2007-01-15 12:19:35 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you get the right apsect tires (sidewall height) it should ride like stock.

My advice is to go with the 22" Vogue tire. The are stylish and will provide the neccessary aspect you need.

Please donot put rubberband tires (real skinny tires) on there.

2007-01-16 05:01:30 · answer #10 · answered by Guess 3 · 0 0

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