I was secretly pondering about 19” wheels but since they switched brake supplier to Brembo no one really knows if 19s would clearAre these 20"/21" wheels or will smaller diameter wheels fit over the brakes?
View attachment 26036
I like the idea of a set of all-terrain (3PMSF) tires for snow/dirt and a set of summer wheels.
There aren't any all terrain tires in 265/55R19 (or 19" in general).I was secretly pondering about 19” wheels but since they switched brake supplier to Brembo no one really knows if 19s would clear
I was secretly pondering about 19” wheels but since they switched brake supplier to Brembo no one really knows if 19s would clear
From Akebono to Brembo, 6 piston front, 4 piston rear, 390/388 discsI thought they switched to Akebono.
You are thinking off road and I was going summer tire but there are 0 options in stock sizing for 19s so back to my original plan of 22s front and back.There aren't any all terrain tires in 265/55R19 (or 19" in general).
However, 265/60R18 is a very common size and 285/60R18 is also a very common size (same diameter as stock rear tires.)
Though now I see that 18" wheels don't fit the Air so it seems very unlikely that they'll clear the brakes on the Gravity.
Has anyone found 23" winter tires?
I think the 20/21 wheel tire option is perfect for the winter set as range drop will be offset with smaller wheel. There are highly rated winter tires on TireRack in stock sizesHas anyone found 23" winter tires?
I been wheel and tire shopping for some months, ordered the 20/21 and will move them to winter and will go 22” all around for summer.I'm really struggling with what to do wheel- and tire-wise.
On one hand, I think the look of the 22/23 is BY FAR the best of the bunch, and I want to minimize the minivan aesthetic.
On the other hand, I have always had terrible luck with big rims and low profile tires. The ride is rough, they get killed in potholes, I tear through tires. And the tires on this puppy are NOT going to be cheap. Plus, I do need to navigate the snow sometimes (I live in the Mid-Atlantic, so we get plenty of rain and a handful of snow events on average each year). Snow tires are usually overkill, so I've done really well in general with all-season tires which are a nice compromise (though I know in a Lucid I should be thinking "compromise nothing!") that don't require me to change rims or tires out in the winter (either is a massive PITA). I'm tempted by the Pirelli Scorpions but holy hell are the rears really $1100+ A TIRE??? Wow. I'll be furious when I slam a pothole, or just rip through the rubber after too much aggressive acceleration out of stoplights etc. I am not going to drive this car anywhere close to its limits most of the time, so the max performance is overkill for me, and besides, it's going to cost me $3K on top of the price to mount the all-seasons, since it comes with just summer tires.
So I'm tempted to go with one of the smaller set-ups, which handily include all-season tires (and I think more tire options at lower cost moving forward), but aesthetically I just don't like the wheels as much. I think it's really weird that the smallest wheel is only available in "Onyx Grey" even when platinum trim is selected, so it just looks off to me in that combo. Plus, although I like grey or dark grey rims in the right circumstances, I almost never like black. It's really hard to tell in any of the photos currently available how "black" the rims are (20/21 or 21/22); that could be a deal breaker for me. The Orion wheel looks a bit silly in the photos in the platinum trim - it's just too plain. But we also have precious few photos available of these smaller rims a) in daylight or from multiple angles and b) without the plastic inserts. So it's just awfully hard to make this call sight unseen. I guess I have to wait until there are some samples available at the showrooms - Gosh I hope they can at least ship a few wheels and tires to the experience centers in the various colors so that we're not making this decision blind even once showroom cars arrive.
I will admit there is a slight tug pulling me back to the biggest rims just to be earlier in the queue.....
Am I the only one struggling with this decision?
I’m really not struggling at all- 20/ 21s all the way. I personally got over the “they look better” thing a while ago — form follows function. So when my BMW 1M came on ‘19s but takeoff M3 18’s on extreme performance summer tires proved more fun (more playful over the limit as well as faster at the autocross) the 19s sat in the garage and I didn’t miss them a bit. I simply wasn’t willing to compromise performance and enjoyment for looks.I'm really struggling with what to do wheel- and tire-wise.
Am I the only one struggling with this decision?
I was totally on board with you and was gonna change my order but now that there's a Dream Edition.....I’m really not struggling at all- 20/ 21s all the way. I personally got over the “they look better” thing a while ago — form follows function. So when my BMW 1M came on ‘19s but takeoff M3 18’s on extreme performance summer tires proved more fun (more playful over the limit as well as faster at the autocross) the 19s sat in the garage and I didn’t miss them a bit. I simply wasn’t willing to compromise performance and enjoyment for looks.
My bet is that in many ways the larger wheel options will compromise big parts of the Gravity’s real world performance. 10% shorter range means you charge 10% slower in miles per minute, ie more time on a road trip stopped at a charger — you’re actually slower over ground. Ride obviously, but also how progressively the car breaks away and hence how it talks to you around the limit. I’m sure the 22s/23s will be faster against the clock, but is that something I need to prioritize in this car? No, even if I look forwards to humbling some sports cars at the autocross once or twice…
More minor factors were pinch flats, bent rims, rubber replacement and electricity bills (the bigger wheels are around another ~$1k in juice at PG&E rates). Factor these in and the biggest rims are likely more like $7k option over five years. For a car that will get me from A to B less comfortably and more slowly (real world)? Made it a pretty easy call for me, but looking at the reservation tracker I can see I’m in the minority. To each their own obviously, and for a different driver I could see going another way, but the engineer in me is simply too practical.
I have all the same concerns. I don't want black wheels, and I don't want the compromise of cost, availability, ride comfort, range from the biggest wheels. I had considered optioning the small wheels and then buying the mid-size set in Silver. But I am leaning towards just optioning the mid-size wheels and then replacing tires as needed.I'm really struggling with what to do wheel- and tire-wise.
On one hand, I think the look of the 22/23 is BY FAR the best of the bunch, and I want to minimize the minivan aesthetic.
On the other hand, I have always had terrible luck with big rims and low profile tires. The ride is rough, they get killed in potholes, I tear through tires. And the tires on this puppy are NOT going to be cheap. Plus, I do need to navigate the snow sometimes (I live in the Mid-Atlantic, so we get plenty of rain and a handful of snow events on average each year). Snow tires are usually overkill, so I've done really well in general with all-season tires which are a nice compromise (though I know in a Lucid I should be thinking "compromise nothing!") that don't require me to change rims or tires out in the winter (either is a massive PITA). I'm tempted by the Pirelli Scorpions but holy hell are the rears really $1100+ A TIRE??? Wow. I'll be furious when I slam a pothole, or just rip through the rubber after too much aggressive acceleration out of stoplights etc. I am not going to drive this car anywhere close to its limits most of the time, so the max performance is overkill for me, and besides, it's going to cost me $3K on top of the price to mount the all-seasons, since it comes with just summer tires.
So I'm tempted to go with one of the smaller set-ups, which handily include all-season tires (and I think more tire options at lower cost moving forward), but aesthetically I just don't like the wheels as much. I think it's really weird that the smallest wheel is only available in "Onyx Grey" even when platinum trim is selected, so it just looks off to me in that combo. Plus, although I like grey or dark grey rims in the right circumstances, I almost never like black. It's really hard to tell in any of the photos currently available how "black" the rims are (20/21 or 21/22); that could be a deal breaker for me. The Orion wheel looks a bit silly in the photos in the platinum trim - it's just too plain. But we also have precious few photos available of these smaller rims a) in daylight or from multiple angles and b) without the plastic inserts. So it's just awfully hard to make this call sight unseen. I guess I have to wait until there are some samples available at the showrooms - Gosh I hope they can at least ship a few wheels and tires to the experience centers in the various colors so that we're not making this decision blind even once showroom cars arrive.
I will admit there is a slight tug pulling me back to the biggest rims just to be earlier in the queue.....
Am I the only one struggling with this decision?
To nerd out a little…Also, as @PetevB explained, stepping down in wheel diameters can actually bring some performance and handling advantages, although it will probably be fairly marginal with a 1" step-down. And, when it comes to straight-line acceleration and braking, more sidewall flexion allows the tread to grab harder. There's a reason that drag racers use high-profile tires, after all.
Wider tires with a bigger diameter on large rims have downsides, particularly weight, but they reduce slip angle and improve both cornering grip and response.
In this size range for handling I’d be choosing between the bigger two sizes mainly based on rubber, both stock and aftermarket.
So typically cornering response will improve with a shorter sidewall. It helps to have a mental image of how the tread is connected with the rim through the sidewall, and how those things move relative to each-other under load. Below for example you can see the tread isn't rotating on the same axis as the rim- that's where some of the slip angle and delayed response comes from. That can be mitigated by a stiffer sidewall, but that can reduce grip by overloading the outside edge of the rubber, which grips best at a specific PSI of ground pressure. So in general grip is reduced with uneven pressure/ loading at the contact patch.With lessening the role of tread width in the equation, how much does wheel diameter alone affect cornering grip and response? I assume a shorter sidewall would keep the contact patch a bit wider, all other things being equal? But wouldn't sidewall construction (stiffness) throw in another significant variable?