Will these alloy wheels fit my vauxhall corsa c?

Will peugeot alloy wheels fit a vauxhall corsa c?

  • I have just purchased peugeot alloy wheels for my vauxhall corsa. i am told they have the same PCD but different offset , can anyone tell me if they will fit / identify the exact make ...show more

  • Answer:

    Absolutely not. The Peugeot 4 bolt wheel, as pointed out already, is a 4x108 fitment, and the Corsa is a 4x100 fitment. Also, the 206 is unique within Peugeot for have a distinct offset. The wheels won't even fit a 106. Everything is wrong with your suggestion. Save your money.

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Not all Peugeot wheels are the same across all the years and makes that they sell/have sold. Your car needs 4 x 100 and the wheels on the ad say 4 x 100 but this could be an error as many Peugeot wheels, like the 206 are 4 x 108. Correct the off set is wrong too and you should not fit them They have already sold anyway

Timbo is here

Nathan,this is only from memory but I seem to recall that the PCD on the Corsa is 100mm x 100mm so if the Peugot wheels were sold to you with these dimensions the four fixing points will line up fine. The different offset can make a difference though dependant on such things like if your Corsa has been lowered for example. The smaller Vauxhalls have quite a high offset like 45mm to 49mm, this means that it was determined through testing in development to be the desired distance of the centre line of the wheel to be from it's fixing point, this insure best handling, ride quality, geometery,etc,etc. Also this higher offset tended to keep the outer face of the wheels in line with the bodywork or slightly tucked behind the wheel arches. There are laws that prevent wheels protruding too much beyond the bodywork for fear of catching and hurting people by accident. If the Peugots offset is a lower dimension, say....35mm or even less,(some volkswagons go as low as 10mm) then the wheels will stick out from the line of the bodywork more than was intended....so 49mm minus 35mm = 14mm and that gives you how much more they will protrude than the original wheels. If your vehicle has been lowered then you run the risk of rubbing occuring on the front wheels when your on full lock or near to it, chances are the back wheels will be ok as they don't move but when your 4 up and going over bad roads scrubbing could occur on the rears as well. I think you should try them on your car and see how you get on with them during a little drive. The offset of the wheel is stamped on the inside face of the wheel as standard it will just have 35 or 45 or 49, etc. I think it also has the PCD embossed in. If the wheels do protrude too much you might have to add aftermarket plastic wheel arches......if your car already has them and they stick out past them then it's a risk you will have to decide on whether to take....there could be MOT issues but you can get around this if you put the originals back on temporarily. I drove my Vauxhall tigra A model around for years on various non standard offsets and I did experience scrubbing with some offsets (I had 15",16",17" and back to 16" wheels throughout it's life, some scrubbed others didn't, the bigger the wheel the wider the tyre so that makes a difference and lowering the car only 30mm gets different results than putting on coilovers and dropping 60mm or greater, these are all factors that alter results.

Kevin M

try checking sites such as http://www.wheelfitment.eu/

David

If they have the same amount of wheel nuts then yes they will do

sarah

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