That's been my thought as well (the part about flipping the wheels), . . . am I putting too much torque on something if I do that?
What if I flip the wheels and leave the flanges as they are (changed for singles)?
I guess it's possible, but I wouldn't want to do that. The wheels/tires will just stick out WAY too far. Might make the truck even more stable, but at what cost? Would put a lot of extra leverage on the wheel-bearings, and would make the truck wider than I'd want to have to deal with.
not at all i didnt say he doesnt know what he's talking about i just said most wont notice much difference on the road .how many of us take corners at speeds that put us at risk of going over sideways with our deuce?off road is a different thing like i said but ussually a rollover is gonna happen with or without the extra 3 or 4 inches of track in the back .there are several videos of m109s with singled 11.00s on them on you tube and the dont seem to be having a hard time .it is all a trade off and you know it will have a small effect but you know that and drive it accordingly. .i'm not trying to spite anyone .just saying that most of us will never feel the difference .also he is comparing 11.00 ndts to the firestones .theres gonna be a big difference in how stabil the truck is just going from bias to radials. so really you are comapring dual radials to single biasplys thats gonna be a big difference. where as going from dual bias to single radials doesnt have the same effect ..i'm 100% percent sure he is right in his experiences with that change
I'm talking about the tone of your posts in general, and I'm telling you that you're just coming off like kind of a ****.
As far as this conversation goes, who knows what any of us will notice, or when any additional stability might make all the difference? Why are you assuming that stability off-road isn't important to any of us? Personally, I was willing to give up a little bit of width/stability in order to make my rig track a little better and make it as maneuverable as possible. But I'm having a hard time finding wheels with an offset that will give me a track-width that I'm comfortable with.
i dont think running the tires to the outside will change the load on the wheel bearings that much .either way you put them they are mounted to the hub off center so the wheel is trying to leverage the hub wethee they are pointed in as singles are normally run or pointed out with the hubs being run as they would with duals.if you arent gonna be running heavy loads i dont think you would ever have bearing problems from runing them either way with singles. duals do help take load off the bearings but singles will put more load on them no matter how you run the wheels
Running the 'outside' wheels/tires in a single configuration most definitely WILL increase the load on the wheel-bearings. It's just a simple matter of leverage. I'm not qualified to say whether it might be a problem in practice, but it's the kind of thing I wouldn't mind finding out the hard way. Worst-case scenario, what's it going to cost me, a new set of wheel-bearings and the time to swap them out?