superj
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- First Name
- Jason
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- Feb 8, 2025
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- Corpus christi texas
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- 2004 ford ranger, 2024 ford ranger
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Some people may not know what hub centric and lug centric means for wheels and vehicles so i took some pics when i put my hub centering rings on this morning.
We are going to discuss hub centeric here.
In my other post about about back spacing and offset, i mentioned center bore diameter as something you need to watch when buying wheels. If the bore diameter of your new wheels are smaller then your truck's hub diameter of 93.1mm, than your wheels will be a no-go. The wheel will not physically mount to the axle hub.
But, if the center bore of your new wheels are larger than 93.1mm, you are in luck because they make these very inexpensive rings that fit onto your axle hub and fill in the space between your wheel's center bore and the axle's mounting hub surface.
You can get plastic or aluminum center bore spacers and most online tire places say to get the plastic ones instead of aluminum as you can get disimilar metal corrosion that will make your spacer and wheel stick very tightly to your truck and sometimes you have to get a mallet to get it all apart.
I watched a video by wheel manufacturer konig that talked about hub spacers because i had never used them before today so i wanted to see what the wheel designers said about them.
This is the video:
So i had already purchased aluminum spacers from amazon before i watched the video because i had also already mounted my cool vision wheels and tires and had been driving on them for a few hundred miles. What i noticed and what made me get the centering spacers is that i had a very very slight shimmy from 82-86mph. I only found this out when i drove to san antonio and back friday, about a 300 mile round trip. I knew it wasn't a balance issue because out of balance issues show up at very specific speeds, roughly 62-68mph.
When i installed my wheels and tires, i mounted the wheel and very specifically hand tightened the lug nuts in a specific star pattern while rotating the wheel assembly and than tightened slightly more in the same pattern and finally torqued the lug nuts down in the specific pattern. I have always mounted wheels to vehicles using specific tightening sequences because that is what i was taught back in the early 90s by my dad and have never had shimmies or wheels come off while driving.
So anyways, i got some hub centric spacers and mounted everything, still following my tightening sequence.
So the wheels feel and look just fine. I haven't taken the truck out yet but i will later and come post back.
Here are the pics
This is my axle mounting surface. I took a very rough measurement to show the size. If you end up needing spacers, your truck is 93.1mm as your inside diameter requirement.
Here is my wheel's rough inside diameter. These wheels are actually a very common 106.7 center bore which also fits toyotas, dodge, and chevy so fyi, if you see wheels for sale from a private seller and their vehicle was one of those, its very cheap to put them on your ranger, like i did.
Here are my nice aluminum centering rings.
Wire brush the surface your rings sits on
They fit right onto my truck hub and also fit perfectly into the wheel bore, exactly like the video dude was talking about. Sweet!
And here they are on amazon
https://a.co/d/0im1Js1B
Really, that is all you need to know about hub centering rings. They have a small important job in their life and will keep you safely driving
We are going to discuss hub centeric here.
In my other post about about back spacing and offset, i mentioned center bore diameter as something you need to watch when buying wheels. If the bore diameter of your new wheels are smaller then your truck's hub diameter of 93.1mm, than your wheels will be a no-go. The wheel will not physically mount to the axle hub.
But, if the center bore of your new wheels are larger than 93.1mm, you are in luck because they make these very inexpensive rings that fit onto your axle hub and fill in the space between your wheel's center bore and the axle's mounting hub surface.
You can get plastic or aluminum center bore spacers and most online tire places say to get the plastic ones instead of aluminum as you can get disimilar metal corrosion that will make your spacer and wheel stick very tightly to your truck and sometimes you have to get a mallet to get it all apart.
I watched a video by wheel manufacturer konig that talked about hub spacers because i had never used them before today so i wanted to see what the wheel designers said about them.
This is the video:
So i had already purchased aluminum spacers from amazon before i watched the video because i had also already mounted my cool vision wheels and tires and had been driving on them for a few hundred miles. What i noticed and what made me get the centering spacers is that i had a very very slight shimmy from 82-86mph. I only found this out when i drove to san antonio and back friday, about a 300 mile round trip. I knew it wasn't a balance issue because out of balance issues show up at very specific speeds, roughly 62-68mph.
When i installed my wheels and tires, i mounted the wheel and very specifically hand tightened the lug nuts in a specific star pattern while rotating the wheel assembly and than tightened slightly more in the same pattern and finally torqued the lug nuts down in the specific pattern. I have always mounted wheels to vehicles using specific tightening sequences because that is what i was taught back in the early 90s by my dad and have never had shimmies or wheels come off while driving.
So anyways, i got some hub centric spacers and mounted everything, still following my tightening sequence.
So the wheels feel and look just fine. I haven't taken the truck out yet but i will later and come post back.
Here are the pics
This is my axle mounting surface. I took a very rough measurement to show the size. If you end up needing spacers, your truck is 93.1mm as your inside diameter requirement.
Here is my wheel's rough inside diameter. These wheels are actually a very common 106.7 center bore which also fits toyotas, dodge, and chevy so fyi, if you see wheels for sale from a private seller and their vehicle was one of those, its very cheap to put them on your ranger, like i did.
Here are my nice aluminum centering rings.
Wire brush the surface your rings sits on
They fit right onto my truck hub and also fit perfectly into the wheel bore, exactly like the video dude was talking about. Sweet!
And here they are on amazon
https://a.co/d/0im1Js1B
Really, that is all you need to know about hub centering rings. They have a small important job in their life and will keep you safely driving
Sponsored
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