'99 up 6 lug rims vs. older style, vs. Toyota
I'm assuming the '99 up bolt pattern is metric, but I've also seen them on early '90s trucks, and even a '66 Suburban! How different are they, and could one use them as rollers on older trucks? Also, newer steel 6 lug Tacoma rims seem to be going for cheap on FB marketplace, did those become metric at some point? I own a '70 Suburban as well as an '81 Jeep J-10 that are both 6 lug, and only one set of really dry rotted tires on Chevy rallies. (I would NEVER drive a dry rotted tire on the street, I've personally had two explode while parked! Thanks!
I'm assuming the '99 up bolt pattern is metric, but I've also seen them on early '90s trucks, and even a '66 Suburban! How different are they, and could one use them as rollers on older trucks? Also, newer steel 6 lug Tacoma rims seem to be going for cheap on FB marketplace, did those become metric at some point? I own a '70 Suburban as well as an '81 Jeep J-10 that are both 6 lug
1970 Suburban 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm)
1981 Jeep J-10 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm)
1999 Suburban 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm)
2020 Tacoma 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm)
Look at weight rating, offset, and PSI rating of each.
1966 Suburban 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm) center bore 3.58" (91mm)
1970 Suburban 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm) center bore 3.08" to 3.27" (78.3mm to 83mm)
1981 Jeep J-10 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm) center bore 4.25" (108mm)
1999 Suburban 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm) center bore 3.08" (78.3mm)
2020 Tacoma 6-lug: 6 x 5.5" (6 x 139.7mm) center bore 4.17" (106mm)
Look at weight rating, offset, and PSI rating of each.
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