Changing the tire aspect ratio... Good or bad?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by truckerben, Nov 10, 2017.

  1. truckerben

    truckerben Bobtail Member

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    I own a 2013 Volvo VNL 670. My current tires are Bridgestone 295/75R22.5

    I want to buy steer Michelin tires, but they only sell with aspect ratio 60 or 80. I was thinking of getting 80s. What will this change in my drive? Going from 295/75R22.5 steer to 295/80R22.5 steer.

    Also, what is the difference between load range G and H? I read many articles, but I can't tell which is better for me. I think my current ones are G. I usually carry mid to heavy loads on long hauls.

    Thanks in advance.
     
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  3. x1Heavy

    x1Heavy Road Train Member

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    Whatever rating for load on your CURRENT tires, assuming drives is the rating you get new tire with....

    DO NOT put different aspect, if you stack small short 60's with 80's the big 80 is going to feel cheated carrying all the load that the 60 wont do. If you stuck a 80 on with other 60's then that 80 must fail quickly due to too much loading.

    Whatever all your drives aspect is at is what you buy. It has to match equally all around.

    If not? Then your drives internals will not be happy and start wearing and overheating.
     
  4. 86mechanic

    86mechanic Medium Load Member

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    The ratio is the height of the sidewalls, 295 is the with of the tire, so 80 means the sidewalls are 80% of 295mm.
    So if you get the 80 it's gonna be a little bit higher then the one you have now.
    As long as you don't mismatch them on the same axle, you should be fine.
     
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  5. TripleSix

    TripleSix God of Roads

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    You’re buying a whole set? Well, the only thing that should happen is the higher side profile will give you a slightly taller gear ratio. Slightly lower rpm at the same speed...btw, your speedometer may be a bit slow. You will be rolling at a slightly higher speed than what the speedometer shows.
     
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  6. 86mechanic

    86mechanic Medium Load Member

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    I thought he's talking about steer tires!?
     
  7. truckerben

    truckerben Bobtail Member

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    Yes, just steer. My drive tires were replaced 5 months ago.
     
  8. truckerben

    truckerben Bobtail Member

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    No, I am only buying the steer tires. My drive tires were replaced 5 months ago.
     
  9. Pedigreed Bulldog

    Pedigreed Bulldog Road Train Member

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    H rated tires have more plies, hold more pressure, and come with a higher load rating than your G rated tires.

    I wouldn't worry about the slight aspect ratio difference as long as you're doing both steer tires.
     
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  10. TripleSix

    TripleSix God of Roads

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    Got it. I was mislead by the ‘what will this change in my drive?’ question. Steers only...no changes.
     
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