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Enkei Raijin or has anyone heard of Verde?
Wheels and brakes are in my imminent future. I was looking at the Einkei Raijin on Tire Rack and was wondering what/if I would have to run spacers. A couple post down there is some one asking about Enkei and I know they are reputable and have a fair price. But at the bottom of the Tire Rack page there are "new" wheels called Verde Paralax. suckers are 700 for a full 19" staggered set up. That has got to be too good to be true. Anyone have any experience with them? I'm leaning toward the Raijin as it is so spacer help would be great, but I am entertaining the Paralx's cause I would have money left over to powder coat them...
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No named wheels that are probably twice the weight of enkeis? No thanks.
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They don't look too bad for 700 bucks. Kind of like Vossen CV-5, but comparing these to the Enkeis Chrischhorn is probably right about the weight. I've bought wheels from Americas tires before on an older car I had but I honestly I wouldn't put them on my Z
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yea like I said I am feelin the Raijin any way, but 700 bucks is kind of hard to pass up.
These are the specs on the Raijins: Front size: 18x8.5 Offset: 38mm Backspacing: 6.25 Rear Size: 18x9.5 Offset: 15mm Backspacing: 5.78 Are these offsets ok or will there need to be extreme spacer usage? I want flush and dont mind using spacers, but flush is the key Heres a link to the Raijin also http://www.tirerack.com/wheels/Wheel...All&sort=Brand |
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I've been eyeballing the Raijin's lately myself. You'll need a spacer for flush fitment but I think it's possible to make them work.
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Ok thats fine. 20 and 15 is no problem :tup:. I dont have a drop and though I want one, the roads around here would literally tear my car apart :( I bottom out enough as it is...
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Never skimp on wheels just because they are cheap. The only thing about your car that touches the ground are the wheels and tires. Cheap wheels can be heavy and flimsy. Although forged is the way to go I know it can be expensive.
my .02c is to save and get something forged that is lightweight and strong. There are a lot of cracked wheels and accident pictures around. Also PC crappy wheels make them even more vulnerable to crack when hitting potholes and bumps. |
meh, for every 1 failed wheel story there are 500 success stories. Enkei is reputable and acceptably priced, and I'm not about to drop 2k for wheels and then another 1200 on tires. Not happening.
Also here is a more expansive sizing chart. I add the spacer mm to the offset right? So i want 58 in the front and 30 in the back? http://www.enkei.com/size_chart/RAIJIN.pdf |
those verde's are only 4 lbs heavier than the enkeis. I would go for it if you like them. In my experience, Tire Rack doesn't sell crap. However, they only have 1 front wheel in stock right now, not expecting more until 5/3. They only have two rears in stock also.
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yea I saw that. I might as well get the Raijin because I would have to pay to get the Verde's powder coated anyway. Silver isn't happening either haha, but I was interested in the 19's. The raijin come in 19 as you can see from the chart, but I'm no wheel fitment guru so I don't know if they would work
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I like the Raijin but unless you go 18x9.5 (+15) or 19x9.5 (+15) they will be too conservative for a 370z
This is a sizing chart directly from Enkei for reference: http://www.enkei.com/size_chart/RAIJIN.pdf I would instead go with a set of Enkei RPF1's in 19x9.5 (+22) and 19x10.5 (+15) |
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Front size: 18x8.5 Offset: 38mm Backspacing: 6.25 Rear Size: 18x9.5 Offset: 15mm Backspacing: 5.78 Waizzz? Im not doubting Chrischhorn here but I'm welcoming all opinions I'd like to stay 18 for the price... |
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