Jump to content

22" Factory GMC Denali Wheels


Recommended Posts

Posted

Lot of that going on here.

Smartasses.

Everyone is an expert 

He's asking around $1100 .

You don't have to buy them if you think it's too much.

 

Posted
6 minutes ago, dieselfan1 said:

Lot of that going on here.

Smartasses.

Everyone is an expert 

He's asking around $1100 .

You don't have to buy them if you think it's too much.

 

A lot of you guys are on your first truck. I've owned 16 Silverados in the last 25 years .Since before they called them Silverado.  I know a little. I'm old

Posted
6 minutes ago, NWI Denali said:

$1100 is probably a good starting point. $800 would probably get rid of them quickly. So you are in the ballpark.

That's all I said . It might be on the high end but if they are mint they are probably worth it .

Then they want to argue about it  . That's the internet for ya 

Posted

The wheels I swapped out  on my 2018 Silverado were a $3000 option on a 2019 Suburban Premier. 83,000 sticker price. I bet the wheels we are talking about cost about the same on the sticker 

1545876677206630108610871768766.jpg

Posted
22 minutes ago, PhatBoy said:

Paid $1k for these new take off wheels/tires, no sensors.  Paying anything over $1400 for stock wheels and tires is crazy....... 

20171116_170630.jpg

You stole them. Good deal .

The tires on my wheels cost $300 a pop so I figure I payed $200 each for the wheels. $2000 total sensors included. I would have had a hard time paying any more though. It made my truck look totally different. The 18" wheels it came with had that dime a dozen look.

Posted

I would check craigslist and get a feel for what people have OEM's up for. Here in Jacksonville, FL prices are all over the place.
If you have a number set in mind, be prepared to hold onto them for a while. 

For this one I honestly don't know if he is selling one, or the set of 4. 

https://gainesville.craigslist.org/wto/d/gainesville-22-chevy-silverado-wheels/6753311470.html

This set isn't 22", but its a 20" Denali HD wheel. Going for 1500.

https://ocala.craigslist.org/wto/d/leesburg-2018-gmc-denali-wheels-and/6741357144.html

 

Sort of comparing apples to oranges. Check around and see what the market is.

Posted

The 22"s he has for sale are nice. They obviously had enough miles to replace the tires. Around the Philadelphia area, a set of 22" chrome take off wheels is going for $2000 on up to $2600. Watch out for reproductions being passed off as OEM.

Posted
On 1/1/2019 at 10:35 PM, RACERX7775 said:

The 22"s he has for sale are nice. They obviously had enough miles to replace the tires. Around the Philadelphia area, a set of 22" chrome take off wheels is going for $2000 on up to $2600. Watch out for reproductions being passed off as OEM.

I rest my case

Posted
On ‎12‎/‎26‎/‎2018 at 6:11 PM, dieselfan1 said:

The wheels I swapped out  on my 2018 Silverado were a $3000 option on a 2019 Suburban Premier. 83,000 sticker price. I bet the wheels we are talking about cost about the same on the sticker 

1545876677206630108610871768766.jpg

22"s are a $2995.00 option on all GM trucks and SUV's. They have multiple choices, either on the truck, or factory ordered.

Posted
On 1/4/2019 at 11:16 PM, dieselfan1 said:

I rest my case

I sold them within 10 minutes of posting. You were dead on. No haggle or anything. 

Posted

I just sold my Ultimate wheels for 1500. I had the black 22’s put on my truck prior to delivery. Technically take offs but they didn’t even leave the lot. I had a lot of people offering 1000 and a few for 1200/1300. They had lugs and sensors. 

Archived

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

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/fuel-economy-stickers-don-t-tell-the-whole-story-aaa-data-reveals-why/ar-AA26ocHk?ocid=winp2fptaskbarhover&cvid=6a4122ea3dae47e5b8dfbed5d4fd3d55&cvpid=648f6b4fc2fa4eddb4c12893aeb957ed&ei=59
    • What’s missing in all this is patience and investment in the future. Buy a 170K starter home. Ten years later sell it invest in a more expensive home. Eventually you’ll have a 600K home and pay starter home payments. Buy a starter car. Maintain it well. Save the payments after it’s payed for then buy an expensive car if you desire. Buy a tumbler make your own coffee, pack your lunch. Cook your own dinner. Most importantly take care of your car.
    • People mislead themselves. Statistics are highly useful indicators.   Here's the tie-in to this thread. If an oil sample tests shows a wear indicator of 7 using cheaper ACDelco oil, and a wear indicator of 2 (lower = less wear) using a particular brand of Mobil oil, and wear has a linear relationship with engine lifespan, anyone could assume that Mobil is reducing wear by more than 50% (let's just say a 200% reduction for you red state people trying hard to do math) which leads to increasing engine life by 2x. Perhaps, in a vacuum, by itself, when dreamed by AI.   Yeah?! That's what the statistic is saying, isn't it?   No, it isn't. It didn't come out and say engine life is doubled. That's a very bad assumption, and a case of severe myopia by assuming something potentially untrue about the only data point in focus.   Average cost of a new car is 50k. You bet it is.   The median cost of a new car is more like 35k. Expensive cars are skewing the perception that "average" now means a $50k price of entry for a very average automobile. And that's not true. People who don't understand statistics twist the living heck out of them to mean all sorts of things they don't actually mean.   "Average" new car payment is $1000/month. Yep, it is. And in that number are all the $35k new car buyers who bring significant equity, and the $25k new car buyers who finance the car for a month just to get a rebate, and then pay it off. Know what isn't in that number? All the payments made by people who don't finance a car.   Picking one's own data point (don't have a car payment, never paid $50k for a new vehicle, my house cost $170k, I afforded a middle class lifestyle on $4.50/hr) is just a data point. Just like earning $25/hr in an area where the median home price is almost $1 Million is a data point. In fact, it's a lot of data points given that 80% of the US population lives in/around major cities. They're not idiots; the vast majority of them do it to make a living because that's where the big money is.   The highs have become higher, lows have become lower, and how your personal mileage varies is not truth for an entire country. At the same time you can't NOT acknowledge the data. While it doesn't paint YOUR personal picture, it certainly tints the reality that you also live in, as does your single data point.    
    • Glad you had success with it. I did as well, but about 5-6 months later it returned. Tried again, same result. This was after the dealer made several attempts and never even got it to slow down.
    • 3.15 Kroger’s in Montgomery Tx
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...