Just got mine Friday. Picked It up in Texas and drove 2 days back to Denver. I went with the duratracs also just in the 235/85-16. Slightly taller and a little skinnier. Loving it so far
Just got mine Friday. Picked It up in Texas and drove 2 days back to Denver. I went with the duratracs also just in the 235/85-16. Slightly taller and a little skinnier. Loving it so far...
I'm gonna be waiting to hear how this one turns out. Potentially a very cool piece of information.My dealer thinks he can order a super single-3500 (for added GVWR and towing) plus 4x4...and high roof. I asked him to "prove it" because the online builder does not allow that combo.
I'm curious, too. Both my T1Ns, in common with a lot of German vehicles, had big positive speedometer errors--e.g., 65 read as about 70--which were removed by going up in tire size (on the T1Ns, to 215/85R16s at 30.4 inches diameter). In exchange, though, the odometers started reading low by about 5%. I'm interested in knowing if new NCV3s have the same big error and if fixing the speedometer as a side effect of bigger tires affects the odometer. Thanks.One question, did you have to adjust the speedo and ESP for the tire change? When I dropped to 16s and bigger, wider Duratracs on my G, I had to have the computer updated to account for the change in tire size.
Indeed. And you also have to remember to multiply your miles/gallons mpg calculation by 1.05 to get the correct fuel economy.Just think of it as getting a 5% longer warranty of the vehicle...
Just think of it as getting a 5% longer warranty of the vehicle...
You've got it backwards
I wouldn't pretend this is important, but the situation with the Sprinters is that the speedometer reads higher than your actual speed, e.g., reads 70, really going 65. As the tire gets larger, there are fewer revolutions of the tire in a mile traveled, and that has the effect of lowering the speed registered by the speedometer and lowering the miles recorded by the odometer.The "5% longer warranty" only works when using a tire large enough such that your true speed is higher than the vehicle registers. Also how you get a speeding ticket for 70 mph when speedometer showed just 65.
No, not actually. With stock tires, the T1N sprinters speedo displays a higher than actual value for speed but the odometer is spot on from my own, and others, experience. With a bit larger tires installed, the speed is then correct, but the odometer reads a lower value since there are fewer revolutions of the larger tire per mile traveled. So you get a bit extra distance and time on the warranty - not that it maters very much since the sprinters tend to be pretty reliable and the warranties are pretty short.