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BMW 3-Series (E90 E92) Forum
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Anyone recognise these wheels?
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09-27-2009, 11:49 AM | #1 |
Colonel
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Anyone recognise these wheels?
or this car the stealer has for sale
And yes, I've checked the link to wheel styles and cant find them. Best the dealer can tell me so far is he thinks they are off an M6! Genuine fit for an e92 or dodgy replicas? |
09-27-2009, 12:37 PM | #2 |
THE DIESEL WEASEL
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Those look like M6 Replicas mate. as the genuine M6 wheels wont fit the E92.
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09-27-2009, 12:53 PM | #3 |
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They still look nice though, and suit the car !
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09-27-2009, 01:10 PM | #5 | |
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On link below the genuine ones are styling 167 - but only for fit to E63 ff 6 series list (and under E60 5 series too as they became an option for the M5 - with again different offsets). All genuine ones are 19". http://felgenkatalog.auto-treff.com/ The car probably also doesn't have runflats either. Which begs the question, is this an AUC car? Is it being sold with replica rims and non-runflats? Which dealer is it? Interesting precedent potentially! |
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09-27-2009, 01:23 PM | #6 | |
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M6 reps then. Good point on the runflats, car is an AUC 'coming soon' with 230's listed as the wheels. No official pics yet, he sent me through that one via email. Dealer is Park Lane. Speaking to them tomorrow to find out more. |
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09-27-2009, 02:06 PM | #8 | |
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I think it's worrying that the dealers don't know M6 reps from real wheels.
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09-27-2009, 03:33 PM | #9 | |
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They are DEFO reps - majority of the cheaper ones are not stagered setups either - I searched for ages when buying my M6 reps for the 'vert to get a setup that fitted properly. OP - if you do consider buying this car ensure it has wider rears fitted. Personally I would insist that proper BMW alloys be fitted as my reps looked pretty poor after a winters use - the salt got under the lacquer causing some surface corrosion. OEM alloys will last for years (unless they are 225M's ) and still look good 230's suit the coupe very well, especially in SE guise |
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09-27-2009, 04:27 PM | #10 |
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09-27-2009, 04:33 PM | #11 |
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I agree with carl about dealers putting them on there AUC website, my brother in law has just sold his disco 3 with supercharger wheels but there reps and cost him £300 second hand with 4mm of tread, anyway first words out of the salesman mouth was are those upgraded wheels lol,of course he said yes lol, i started a thead last week about a 335d with quad exhausts and they were small pipes, surely the dealers know how many tail pipes are on a 335i or d, just strange to put them on there website to sell
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09-27-2009, 04:52 PM | #12 | |
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If a dealer chooses to repair corroded wheels on an AUC car that was purchased recently, that would be a 'goodwill' claim as opposed to an official BMW warranty claim. If the dealer were to supply an AUC car with aftermarket alloys, and the suspension were to fail thereafter, that supplying dealer will still have to honour the warranty claim, as by selling the car via the AUC program they are in effect validating the mechanical competence of the car as sold
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09-27-2009, 05:00 PM | #13 | |
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Lets agree to disagree. there is enough weedling out of warranty and crappy dealer service already out there, without buying a car with replica wheels on it - not to mention the fact they may well be crap copies that are more likely to bend (even more of an issue given your points). |
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09-27-2009, 05:03 PM | #14 |
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end of the day reps are reps there out there to be cheap and thats it,you get what yo pay for,i saw a pic of M3-fast M6 reps and were shocked how bad of a state there in sorry to put you down m8, it put me of buying rep full stop
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09-28-2009, 04:00 AM | #15 |
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There's no requirement to sell the cars with RFTs, as their is no requirement to even use them at all.
Look round any AUC yard and you'll see 3er, 1er, 5er cars with regular tyres. They couldn't give a toss what tyres are on. Of course, when trading in they'll give you the BS about having to pay for a full set of RFTs though.... |
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09-28-2009, 12:35 PM | #16 | |
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Must admit I've never checked a dealers used stock for this, should have a poke around next time. I know that some new 318s etc. don't come with RFTs from the factory now anyway. Interestingly, the feedback on here actually confirms a car is probably worth less as a trade in with replicas - as I read it most of the posters here wouldn't be happy buying the car with the reps, so the dealer probably has to change them to OEM to avoid limiting his market of buyers (and factor that into his trade in price). |
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09-28-2009, 01:21 PM | #17 |
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So how does fitting non RFT's affect your insurance if at all? What I mean is could an insurance company, in the event of an accident try and use the fact that a BMW supplied and fitted with RFT's as OEM no longer had them fitted and it 'affected' the manner in which the car behaved.
Suppose a precedent needs to be set in law before a conclusive answer could be given. Has one already been made? Personally don't think it should affect any potential claim but just a thought. Back O/T, think reps are 'get what you pay for sometimes'. |
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09-28-2009, 01:29 PM | #18 |
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Dealer left a message to say they are non bmw wheels (which I think we'd all worked out by now), I rang back and missed him
Personally, I'd only consider buying the car if they stick new 230's and RFT's on, I cant see how it would fit the AUC criteria as it is. (the reps do look good though) Being a tight wad my search for the right car at the right price is taking some time! On the insurance issue, but off topic, maybe if you had a blow out at speed with non rft's which then caused a severe crash, the insurers could say that wouldnt have happened with rfts. Happy Monday |
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09-29-2009, 02:57 AM | #19 |
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For sure a car is worth less with reps on, same as a set of halfords led lights.
But the selling dealer is taking legal responsibility for those wheels and any subsequent problems cause by them, they could even be sued in the future. It's in their own interest to change them for an OE set. RFTs are a cost option on ES models since 08, so they can't be that much of a safety issue. Do you get a jack and spare if you don't order RFTs then?? There may be some insurance issue if BMW said in the manual 'you must use RFT tyres, fitment of non approved RFT or non RFT tyres will invalidate warranty and may be dangerous' in big capital letters in the WARNINGS section. As it is fitting non RFT tyres is no different to using mobil oil when the manual recommends castrol. They can't on one hand say they are vital to safety, then on the other choose not to fit them on certain models and charge for them on others. |
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