I'm looking to find out what staggering tires or wheels means since I have no idea what that is.|||Staggered tires/wheels are when the back tires are wider than the front. The diameter of the wheels are the same for instance 18', 19", etc. wheels, but the tire sizes and the width of the rims are different. A lot of sports cars like M-3 BMW's, Porsche's, and Corvettes have staggered wheels to give the cars a more aggressive look.|||The rear wheels and/or tires are wider on the rear axle than on the front. This is usually encountered on rear drive sports cars such as the Porsche 911 (and particularly on mid or rear-engined cars which are tail heavy) to provide more traction at the rear axle. This makes the car less likely to oversteer (spin out of control) due to the combination of very much horsepower and/or extra weight at the back of the car.|||Some people who don't know much about cars think that staggering tires means that the rims are loose and the tires move around. Staggering tires are tires that are larger and wider in the rear. Staggering tires can have turbo but it all depends on what kind of car you have.|||RezJaye is retarded.
Staggered wheels means the rears are taller than the front. Typically it is possible to "tuck" taller wheels in the rear of a truck than the front.|||It is generally a wider rim/tire on the rear of the car. A lot of BMW's and Audi's do this. Only problem is you cannot rotate the tires front to back. They will not fit.|||In don't know the term you used, but I do know about rotating tires. Tires that are rotated regularly, say, at every oil change, receive more even wear|||Stagger is also something used on oval track race cars.It refers to using a smaller diameter tire on one side of the car and a larger one on the other.|||that makes no sense
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