ubengineer
New member
I keep hearing that if I increase my tires to 35's I'm going to need to re-gear. I currently have stock 3:07. Can someone please explain to me why I would need to regear?
Larger tires will greatly drop the engine RPM at a given speed, causing the engine to struggle. Power and mileage will decrease. If you want an idea of how bad it could be, try shifting from 3rd to 5th when accelerating. The drop in RPM and engine struggling would be similar to shifting to 4th with oversized tires.I keep hearing that if I increase my tires to 35's I'm going to need to re-gear. I currently have stock 3:07. Can someone please explain to me why I would need to regear?
I keep hearing that if I increase my tires to 35's I'm going to need to re-gear. I currently have stock 3:07. Can someone please explain to me why I would need to regear?
This chart is based on 65 MPH and a gear ratio of 1:1, on a manual transmission in 4th gear. Please NOTE: If you have an automatic transmission your RPM will higher due to slippage in the transmission and the torque converter. With an overdrive transmission your RPM in overdrive will be 15% to 30% less than indicated.
What year Wrangler do you have? I just ask because my 2005 came stock with 3.73 gears.
That chart is good for an automatic with this caveat:
from here:
Jeep Parts, Jeep Accessories & Jeep Soft Tops From The Jeep Parts Experts - Quadratec
Doesn't matter. Find the RPM for your stock tire size and gear ratio. Then work your way across the 35" row until you find a similar RPM, that's the proper gear ratio for that tire size. Regardless of transmission type.That's chart is for manual I have an automatic
Stock tire height is 27" or 28", simply follow that over to 3.07 ratio.I have no idea what stock tire rpm would be I currently have 31 tires