moggsy100 Posted November 29, 2012 Share Posted November 29, 2012 Evening.... I currently have the new shape focus on an '11' plate... Its the titanium x model that comes with the 18" alloys with Michellin Pilot Sport 3's 235/40 ZR18 as standard... I already owned a set of winter tyres which I used to put on my old car but this car had the 16" alloys on. So I have purchased 16" steel wheels and had the Michellin Alpin A4's 205/55 R16 fitted to them. I've now swapped my wheels over and thought all was good until I called into my local ford dealer today when he told me I may well of now invalidated parts of my warranty by swapping to smaller wheels but also that i've possibly caused lots of problems now and that i should have the car reprogrammed with the wheels set at this new diameter and at a cost of around £50 !!!!!! As the speedo, abs, trac control etc all work off the wheel size.... Is this correct or am I been fed a bit of nonsense??? Cheers Paul... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
martyntdci Posted December 8, 2012 Share Posted December 8, 2012 as the speedo is concerned, ive just done a wheel correction for you and it works out at a 2.1% difference.. ie if you speedo is reading 60, you will actually be doing around 58 which is not bad at all.... abs imo doesnt work of wheel size, just how hard you plant your foot on the brakes, and traction control just stops any wheel spin. others may dis agree but id say leave it.... Just see what any1 else says tho.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BOF Posted March 13, 2013 Share Posted March 13, 2013 Sorry for the late reply, but abs imo doesnt work of wheel size Well, yes it does (sort of), just not in the way that the garage thinks. There is a toothed wheel and the electronics picks up a wheel speed signal from that. You can define max d-theta-by-dt (sorry, its late and I can't be arsed finding the Greek characters) that would be expected if the tyres are not loosing grip. For a variety of reasons, the lowest speed that the system works down to is a function of the tyre size...but it isn't very critical (you'd like it to work down to 0 mph, and it can't, so anything else is a slightly unsatisfactory compromise) and your tyre rr isn't much different from the original. just how hard you plant your foot on the brakes In a plain ABS system, brake pressure isn't a factor, just whether the tyres are gripping. It might be if you have brake assist, or something, but if is just ABS, no. Remember that the brake pressure that would be fine on a dry road isn't going to be all that fine on ice or snow or even wet....and even how grippy the tyres are is a factor that the electronics knows nothing about. and traction control just stops any wheel spin. Yes, and it works in a vaguely similar way to ABS, but only the front two wheels being controlled (backing off the engine, and applying the brakes depending on the system). So, it depends on rate of change of angular velocity. Where the garage would have a point is if you fitted even slightly different sized wheels front and back - there is enough tolerance in a typical system to allow front and rears to be differently worn, but not much more than that - but you've fitted the same size at both ends, so that doesn't arise. it works out at a 2.1% difference.. I've just run this past willtheyfit, and that gives a 5.82% difference. Still doesn't make a difference to the point that they are the same size at both ends, though... well of now invalidated parts of my warranty by swapping to smaller wheels but also that i've possibly caused lots of problems now and that i should have the car reprogrammed with the wheels set at this new diameter and at a cost of around £50 !!!!!! Well, I'd guess that they'd tell you if you didn't use Ford fuel in your tank and Ford air to blow the tyres up with, you'd invalidate your warranty, if they thought that they could get away with it. Unless there is a ground clearance issue, or the effective offset is wrong, I can't see anything other than the dealer being full of stuff (spelled differently, but still stuff and brown) and trying to cover their rear. If you look in the manual and check the various sizes of tyre fitted to other models of the same car you might even find something as 'extreme' as these fitted to another model. Watch out for the speedo error, though. You might want to check on a sat nav, at constant speed, how it seems to be working out in reality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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