Jump to content

Sierra Denali 1500 with Nissan Titan Wheels for snow


Recommended Posts

Posted

Greetings! After having my highly modded 2007 Nissan Titan for a century, my wife pushed me to upgrade and I ended up with a 2018 Denali 1500. (As a side note, its like going from a go-kart to a Cadillac). 

 

I have some Blizzaks with 4k miles mounted on my stock Titan 17"s that I'd love to use on the Denali. Bolt pattern is the same and since the spare is a 17", it should clear calipers. My question has to do if there will be fitment issues with the hub and lugs. Titan OEM are hub centric with acorn lugs. 

 

Only other thread I found was this one but wanted to confirm

 

Posted
26 minutes ago, wh1skey6 said:

Greetings! After having my highly modded 2007 Nissan Titan for a century, my wife pushed me to upgrade and I ended up with a 2018 Denali 1500. (As a side note, its like going from a go-kart to a Cadillac). 

 

I have some Blizzaks with 4k miles mounted on my stock Titan 17"s that I'd love to use on the Denali. Bolt pattern is the same and since the spare is a 17", it should clear calipers. My question has to do if there will be fitment issues with the hub and lugs. Titan OEM are hub centric with acorn lugs. 

 

Only other thread I found was this one but wanted to confirm

 

Gm hubis 78.1. Not sure what the titan wheels are. But you may just need some hub rings

Posted

I've seen conflicting info on hub size with Titan wheels (78.1 or 77.8). Stupid question but if I put the snow wheels on the Denali, I should know right away if they don't fit the hub right? As in, they just straight up wont fit? I just worry that I'll get them on the Denali and do some damage because I "forced" them on. 

Posted
26 minutes ago, wh1skey6 said:

I've seen conflicting info on hub size with Titan wheels (78.1 or 77.8). Stupid question but if I put the snow wheels on the Denali, I should know right away if they don't fit the hub right? As in, they just straight up wont fit? I just worry that I'll get them on the Denali and do some damage because I "forced" them on. 

Yup. If they fit they fit, if they dont they dont

Posted

I agree with Nasty but I would simply have my snow tires mounted on a set of 17" gm oem rims.  Sell your Nissan rims to a Nissan owner and everyone will have the correct size, offset and look!

Posted

I ran wheels off my 2011 Titan on both my 2014  1500 Denali and my 2017 1500 Denali. No problem at all. 

Posted

I am running 17” ATX wheels I had on my old 2008 Canyon on my 2018 Sierra now. The Canyon needs a larger bore size, but there is no vibration issues with the same wheels on the Sierra.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

 

Posted
These were leftover “17 wheels from my ‘05 Titan.
D94563C6-EA6A-44D5-BB6F-650F2BBE5C1D.thumb.jpeg.2acf9c0f916965654d48ad1a76f090d5.jpeg
Good l9oki g truck!! [emoji2956]

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk

Posted
15 minutes ago, vballdust said:

Pretty smart having a dedicated set of wheels/tires for winter months.

I would not have it any other way.  :)

Posted
On 12/9/2018 at 2:18 PM, Donstar said:

I agree with Nasty but I would simply have my snow tires mounted on a set of 17" gm oem rims.  Sell your Nissan rims to a Nissan owner and everyone will have the correct size, offset and look!

Will probably do this once I find some OEMs. Or take them from my dad's garage.

Posted

Doesn't look terrible I guess. They're actually 18"s (I had 17" steelie wheelies before). Not sure what to do with the NISSAN logo. But Blizzaks this morning with 3" of snow felt good. Here's the Titan. Had to take the snows off, put my 33"s back on, then put the snows on the Denali...

 

ced72915-3134-45a1-8b47-4524c24dc9a4.jpg

00303_6OqpWasRZaX_600x450.jpg

Posted
1 hour ago, wh1skey6 said:

Doesn't look terrible I guess. They're actually 18"s (I had 17" steelie wheelies before). Not sure what to do with the NISSAN logo. But Blizzaks this morning with 3" of snow felt good. Here's the Titan. Had to take the snows off, put my 33"s back on, then put the snows on the Denali...

 

ced72915-3134-45a1-8b47-4524c24dc9a4.jpg

00303_6OqpWasRZaX_600x450.jpg

I've seen plain center caps on FleaBay. I just haven't gotten around to getting a set fo my old truck. Infiniti caps will work too. They have a logo on them, but it's better than having "Nissan" spelled out.

Posted

Silly question, again.

 

Titan TPMS are 315mhz. Sierra's are 315mhz as well, right? Are these OEM proprietary so that they wont work? (I did order the TPMS reset tool on Amazon so I guess I'll know in a few days).

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • Congratulations Isttype, on your gmc. Really like my 2024 2500hd sle doublecab now with 85,500 miles.  I checked the oil today at 4800 miles since last oil change and barely reading on the stick.  I don't care if GM says it's Acceptable adding a quart every 2000 miles because that is 100% BS, It is not a 1966 Harley Shovelhead! Sounds like it's setting up a future failure like I had with my 1500 6.2l. Other than oil consumption problems, I really like the 6.6l gas and 10 speed is really nice.  Towed a light 4000 pound trailer last week and averaged 14 mpg.  I was pretty impressive that a 7300 pound gas truck did 14mpg towing, Later-
    • Long Term Cold Cycle Limited Testing   Back to the 1990's and XOM's million mile test. Since then there have been others and there will be more. Schaeffer's, AMSOIL to name two. Of these Schaeffer's is the stand alone which I will explain in a bit later.    http://papers.sae.org/600190/:   http://papers.sae.org/850215/:   Up to 75% of  engine wear occurs on cold starts. These two links (above) provide the technical reasons for engine wear. In a nut shell, and by a large margin, cylinder wear is what takes out most motors and even with a pre-oiling system that part of the engine is dry enough on cold starts and cold warm up to pierce Stribeck.   So when you put a motor, or a car, on a dyno for a million miles stopping only for oil changes, (yes fuel is uninterrupted) or break down maintenance, you are depriving the test of the most important part of it's wear cycle. Yes a million is then a pretty easy walk even for a mineral oil under those conditions.    How about cleanliness during the long test cycles? Same thing. Varnishes that stick rings and insulate parts are laid down by repetitive 'heat cycles'. It's the cool down the precipitates the varnishes. These long runs also hinder acidic attack caused by cold start richness and less than optimal cold start ring sealing. They hinder water formation and enhance breathing of the crankcase; the petri dish of acid formation, the first step in sludge formation, amalgamation and precipitation. These motors are also monitored and controlled for water and oil temperatures to within the "normal operating range".      https://www.swri.org/sites/default/files/sequence-iiih-test.pdf Note the test sequence in some boutique oils literature for testing, API IIIH, is not the standard used for the ILSAC G7 testing. Does that mean it is irrelevant? No, not as used. As used as a 'visual guide' it makes it's point. The G7 weighted piston deposit minimum is lower.      Back to Schaeffer's. That was a cyclical test of an engine in fleet service and not a dyno mule and if you saw the video it was not mirror clean but wear was low.    There are oils like BioSyn and other 'Renewable" source oils that taught cleanliness and have proven themselves in fleet testing. Havoline an other example.    The newest ILSAC G-7 test prioritize cleanliness, LSPI mitigation and fuel economy OVER WEAR. In comparison Porsche C30 Specification Verses ILSAC G-7 Specification below:      Some will balk that this graph isn't apples to apples and I will challenge that in that this graph represent the SPECIFICATION and not the any One Oil Performance.   It is absolutely possible to minimize wear, maximize cleanliness and mitigate LSPI etc., It just isn't cheap and currently I see none that are not walking toward profit over performance.     
    • I don't think you will need a split, separate product, etc., the OBD port should be able to deliver everything you need. Since your device would be plugged into it all the time, it wouldn't miss anything.    Hardware in this case will be the easiest part of your project - ELM 327 devices will already deliver all the data you need. Reporting/software is where your advantage/marketability is.
    • I do too. I’ll never be stuck again 😂
    • It has happened to me a few times. I carry a jumpstart-tire inflator with me.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...