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Honda Civic Tires and Wheels

238 messages,  Last post on Oct 29, 2009 at 6:41 AM

You are in the Honda Civic Forum. Your Hosts are pat & karens

What is this discussion about? Honda Civic, Coupe, Sedan


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#229 of 238
Re: Tire Size 95 Civic EX [crazyfly] by krazydawg
Jul 06, 2009 (8:46 am)
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Replying to: crazyfly (Jul 05, 2009 12:14 pm)

I found the older Civics like the 92-95 VX/CRX get better MPG and the newer Civics get better MPG than my 95 EX. The 33-34 MPG is achieved mostly from coasting to traffic lights, tire pressure of max 44 PSI, and driving the speed limit. Driving on a flat highway or going 55 MPH raises it up a bit more. I've hit 40 MPG several times. I have an automatic but the manual does make a difference.
#230 of 238
Re: Tire Size 95 Civic EX [krazydawg] by jet10000
Jul 06, 2009 (1:39 pm)
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Replying to: krazydawg (Jul 06, 2009 8:46 am)

Older Civics can get better gas mileage than newer ones because the horsepower was less as well as the curb weight.
#231 of 238
Re: Tire Size 95 Civic EX [krazydawg] by crazyfly
Jul 07, 2009 (3:33 pm)
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Replying to: krazydawg (Jul 06, 2009 8:46 am)

You are getting pretty good gas mileage. In case you've not already taken care of this, you may want to check/replace the air filter and fuel filter of civic just to be sure all is set for optimum air/fuel ratio and performance. A good fuel system cleaner may also help to further increase the mpg.
#232 of 238
2009 Civic TIRE questions by oktexchic
Aug 10, 2009 (7:57 am)
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I am wondering whether to keep the 16" stock wheels or upgrade
to the 16" alloys for Xtra $1,220, or the 17" alloy for Xtra $2,114!! wow pricey stuff
I thought I was told that the larger tire would give smoother ride????
 
Another MAJOR concern is .. tires. WHAT are stock tires on the Civic Couple EX?
Are they cheapo depot? I drive 500 highway miles per week, so is there such a thing as doing the switchout before taking position of car & put on a good Michelen? I don't know how they would compensate me on getting a car without their tires tho.
Anyone savvy in this area?
#233 of 238
Re: [scamper2] by funtechie
Aug 16, 2009 (7:21 am)
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Replying to: scamper2 (Mar 21, 2009 6:44 pm)

There is a service Bulletin. HONDA is aware there is an issue with a control arm in the back end. I just replaced 4 tires at 26,000 miles. HONDA sees no problem with replacing tires at this point.
#234 of 238
Re: 2009 Civic TIRE questions [oktexchic] by ruking1
Aug 16, 2009 (7:55 am)
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Replying to: oktexchic (Aug 10, 2009 7:57 am)

With 26,000 miles per year (I take it that is only the commute) if it were me, it makes all the sense in the world to keep the stock wheels. Then, just keep yourself in good quality commute tires.
#235 of 238
Tire specs vs. OEM by texastransplan
Oct 17, 2009 (5:29 pm)
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My daughter drives a 2007 Honda Civic LX Sedan. She needs to replace the tires. The OEM tires have a Speed Rating of H and a Load Rating of 91. Would there be any ill-effects from replacing them with tires with a Speed Rating of T and a Load Rating of 89?
 
I know that a T Speed Rating indicates a lower speed than the H, but T is supposed to be OK up to 118mph, which should cover anything she will do.
 
I'm less sure about the difference in the Load Rating.
#236 of 238
RE: Tire specs vs. OEM by jet10000
Oct 20, 2009 (8:17 pm)
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My daughter drives a 2007 Honda Civic LX Sedan. She needs to replace the tires. The OEM tires have a Speed Rating of H and a Load Rating of 91. Would there be any ill-effects from replacing them with tires with a Speed Rating of T and a Load Rating of 89?
 
Here's a chart that will help you see how much weight difference will be going from a 91 to an 89:
 
http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiretech/techpage.jsp?techid=35
#237 of 238
RE: Tire specs vs. OEM [jet10000] by texastransplan
Oct 27, 2009 (11:04 am)
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Replying to: jet10000 (Oct 20, 2009 8:17 pm)

Thanks for the response.
 
If I am interpreting the chart correctly, each tire could hande 1279 lbs for the lower rated tire vs. 1356 for the higher.
 
1279 x 4 = 5116
 
1356 x 4 = 5424
 
So the load carrying capacity of the car would be reduced by 318 lbs.
 
5,116 lbs sounds like plenty for a vehicle with a curb weight of 2,657 lbs.
#238 of 238
RE: Tire specs vs. OEM [texastransplan] by jet10000
Oct 29, 2009 (6:41 am)
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Replying to: texastransplan (Oct 27, 2009 11:04 am)

If I am interpreting the chart correctly, each tire could hande 1279 lbs for the lower rated tire vs. 1356 for the higher.
 
Yes, that's my interpretation as well.

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