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How to: modify wheel wells for larger tires/Negative offsets

Dontfront82

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Location
Texas
3.5 rough country lift, 22x9 stocks trac grip m/t 35x12.5r22. zero rubbing or trimming needed, even at full turns or going thru ditches. My tires are 34.8 metric size
 

Mikey1641

Member
Joined
Dec 22, 2018
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Snapped some pictures while modifying the wheel wells today to fit my 35x12.50x20 on a 20x10 -18 offset.

A lot of people ask do they Rub? Answer is Yes, solution is easy since it’s minimal labor.

Tools needed:
Wet towel
8mm socket
Grinder
Spray paint
Heatgun
2 Zip ties
Cold brew of choice!

Begin with finding affected areas, for me it was the Molding on rear of fenders, remove the 8mm bolt and the push in fastener in wheel well. Under the molding there are 2 sliding clips so give the piece a tug outward and should slide right out.
0e186e491894b399981a90da22cf5792.jpg
9c6441a0e441b9ae3b06d23c3e2159ac.jpg



Under the wheel well liner there is a small Metal extension used solely for the retainer clip, this is causing a clearance issue, so I took my grinder and removed it,
eeb380fd7bd6aec3fdf68f603c2c2bde.jpg


2b4d12d4c131d128dbc0ab5eda08643e.jpg


I then drilled a small pilot hole to secure a zip tie to to hold the plastic liner back.

Once done drilling and removing excess sheetmetal apply spray paint of choice to avoid future oxidation.

e41528d9f1e8e9179f01b8dda138746a.jpg


b0775c63403677092cdf1dfb33e45719.jpg




I then proceeded to heat up the plastic liner in the affected area (Clean spot in picture below) as I would heat it up and it would become plyable I then massaged the area with a wet towel in order to mold it back and out of the way giving me more clearance. Move the material around slowly don't heat the area up to much to fast or you can melt it, apply even heat and cool towel pressure will allow you to shape it.


812b4a803e667bfcd9d07aa24678ee78.jpg




Next item to mold was the plastic trim, I heated the inside area to avoid messing with the finish on it, the lower channel is a bit to wide, so by heating it up and again applying pressure with the wet towel I was able to give myself the play needed to clear the tire.

0ed19ba5555a42fed94de0fa7ed10aaf.jpg




Once installed here is the final look, no one would know the difference and you don't have to chop up your fender liners.
fcf6410c52df9f9ab25744ee9e083f1b.jpg



I also had a little rubbing happening on the front part of the fenders, right on the line (marked with square) so I heated this section up evenly and applied pressure again with a wet towel (Cause its hot, and it cools it down into the shape you want to hold) did this process for a few minutes fine tunning moving the material, letting it cool getting in the truck and turning the wheel all the way and listen for the rub. Once you stop hearing the rub you've completed the project.

2ae7b7fc0869c755dbc19f5642751bcd.jpg




5c93ae6002aa4748a84cbbcd03e9a1c5.jpg




Enjoy your Beer and Rub free ride...
Cheers!
//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20180831/acf688d4281f5a2f151e066478ff5916.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Mikey1641

Member
Joined
Dec 22, 2018
Messages
18
Reaction score
6
Snapped some pictures while modifying the wheel wells today to fit my 35x12.50x20 on a 20x10 -18 offset.

A lot of people ask do they Rub? Answer is Yes, solution is easy since it’s minimal labor.

Tools needed:
Wet towel
8mm socket
Grinder
Spray paint
Heatgun
2 Zip ties
Cold brew of choice!

Begin with finding affected areas, for me it was the Molding on rear of fenders, remove the 8mm bolt and the push in fastener in wheel well. Under the molding there are 2 sliding clips so give the piece a tug outward and should slide right out.
0e186e491894b399981a90da22cf5792.jpg
9c6441a0e441b9ae3b06d23c3e2159ac.jpg



Under the wheel well liner there is a small Metal extension used solely for the retainer clip, this is causing a clearance issue, so I took my grinder and removed it,
eeb380fd7bd6aec3fdf68f603c2c2bde.jpg


2b4d12d4c131d128dbc0ab5eda08643e.jpg


I then drilled a small pilot hole to secure a zip tie to to hold the plastic liner back.

Once done drilling and removing excess sheetmetal apply spray paint of choice to avoid future oxidation.

e41528d9f1e8e9179f01b8dda138746a.jpg


b0775c63403677092cdf1dfb33e45719.jpg




I then proceeded to heat up the plastic liner in the affected area (Clean spot in picture below) as I would heat it up and it would become plyable I then massaged the area with a wet towel in order to mold it back and out of the way giving me more clearance. Move the material around slowly don't heat the area up to much to fast or you can melt it, apply even heat and cool towel pressure will allow you to shape it.


812b4a803e667bfcd9d07aa24678ee78.jpg




Next item to mold was the plastic trim, I heated the inside area to avoid messing with the finish on it, the lower channel is a bit to wide, so by heating it up and again applying pressure with the wet towel I was able to give myself the play needed to clear the tire.

0ed19ba5555a42fed94de0fa7ed10aaf.jpg




Once installed here is the final look, no one would know the difference and you don't have to chop up your fender liners.
fcf6410c52df9f9ab25744ee9e083f1b.jpg



I also had a little rubbing happening on the front part of the fenders, right on the line (marked with square) so I heated this section up evenly and applied pressure again with a wet towel (Cause its hot, and it cools it down into the shape you want to hold) did this process for a few minutes fine tunning moving the material, letting it cool getting in the truck and turning the wheel all the way and listen for the rub. Once you stop hearing the rub you've completed the project.

2ae7b7fc0869c755dbc19f5642751bcd.jpg




5c93ae6002aa4748a84cbbcd03e9a1c5.jpg




Enjoy your Beer and Rub free ride...
Cheers!
acf688d4281f5a2f151e066478ff5916.jpg

This will be my exact setup. Fuel contra 20x10 -18. 3.5 sst kit. With Nitto Terra Grappler. Believe there 34.5”. Any regrets with the 35s? 295/60/20. Was my other option Great truck man !!!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

DC98402

Member
Joined
Nov 17, 2018
Messages
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Did a variation of this today. Only I didn’t trim the metal off just bent that piece back, put everything back together. thinking I gained about 1/4” clearance from that. I don’t have the fender flares so the plastic mud flap piece is slightly different. 2” leveling and 295/70r18 with method -12 go on this week. Hope they don’t rub.
 

RamFlyer

New Member
Joined
Jan 1, 2019
Messages
3
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Snapped some pictures while modifying the wheel wells today to fit my 35x12.50x20 on a 20x10 -18 offset.

A lot of people ask do they Rub? Answer is Yes, solution is easy since it’s minimal labor.

Tools needed:
Wet towel
8mm socket
Grinder
Spray paint
Heatgun
2 Zip ties
Cold brew of choice!

Begin with finding affected areas, for me it was the Molding on rear of fenders, remove the 8mm bolt and the push in fastener in wheel well. Under the molding there are 2 sliding clips so give the piece a tug outward and should slide right out.
0e186e491894b399981a90da22cf5792.jpg
9c6441a0e441b9ae3b06d23c3e2159ac.jpg



Under the wheel well liner there is a small Metal extension used solely for the retainer clip, this is causing a clearance issue, so I took my grinder and removed it,
eeb380fd7bd6aec3fdf68f603c2c2bde.jpg


2b4d12d4c131d128dbc0ab5eda08643e.jpg


I then drilled a small pilot hole to secure a zip tie to to hold the plastic liner back.

Once done drilling and removing excess sheetmetal apply spray paint of choice to avoid future oxidation.

e41528d9f1e8e9179f01b8dda138746a.jpg


b0775c63403677092cdf1dfb33e45719.jpg




I then proceeded to heat up the plastic liner in the affected area (Clean spot in picture below) as I would heat it up and it would become plyable I then massaged the area with a wet towel in order to mold it back and out of the way giving me more clearance. Move the material around slowly don't heat the area up to much to fast or you can melt it, apply even heat and cool towel pressure will allow you to shape it.


812b4a803e667bfcd9d07aa24678ee78.jpg




Next item to mold was the plastic trim, I heated the inside area to avoid messing with the finish on it, the lower channel is a bit to wide, so by heating it up and again applying pressure with the wet towel I was able to give myself the play needed to clear the tire.

0ed19ba5555a42fed94de0fa7ed10aaf.jpg




Once installed here is the final look, no one would know the difference and you don't have to chop up your fender liners.
fcf6410c52df9f9ab25744ee9e083f1b.jpg



I also had a little rubbing happening on the front part of the fenders, right on the line (marked with square) so I heated this section up evenly and applied pressure again with a wet towel (Cause its hot, and it cools it down into the shape you want to hold) did this process for a few minutes fine tunning moving the material, letting it cool getting in the truck and turning the wheel all the way and listen for the rub. Once you stop hearing the rub you've completed the project.

2ae7b7fc0869c755dbc19f5642751bcd.jpg




5c93ae6002aa4748a84cbbcd03e9a1c5.jpg




Enjoy your Beer and Rub free ride...
Cheers!
acf688d4281f5a2f151e066478ff5916.jpg
Do you have the 4 wheel air suspension? Thank you for the great tutorial!
 

Granite5thgen

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Feb 15, 2019
Messages
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Location
Upstate NY
So great these new rams can fit 35s without much trouble at all. Try fitting 35s in a Chevy without at least a 4" lift and see if you can turn a corner
 

RODIO555

Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2018
Messages
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Snapped some pictures while modifying the wheel wells today to fit my 35x12.50x20 on a 20x10 -18 offset.

A lot of people ask do they Rub? Answer is Yes, solution is easy since it’s minimal labor.

Tools needed:
Wet towel
8mm socket
Grinder
Spray paint
Heatgun
2 Zip ties
Cold brew of choice!

Begin with finding affected areas, for me it was the Molding on rear of fenders, remove the 8mm bolt and the push in fastener in wheel well. Under the molding there are 2 sliding clips so give the piece a tug outward and should slide right out.
0e186e491894b399981a90da22cf5792.jpg
9c6441a0e441b9ae3b06d23c3e2159ac.jpg



Under the wheel well liner there is a small Metal extension used solely for the retainer clip, this is causing a clearance issue, so I took my grinder and removed it,
eeb380fd7bd6aec3fdf68f603c2c2bde.jpg


2b4d12d4c131d128dbc0ab5eda08643e.jpg


I then drilled a small pilot hole to secure a zip tie to to hold the plastic liner back.

Once done drilling and removing excess sheetmetal apply spray paint of choice to avoid future oxidation.

e41528d9f1e8e9179f01b8dda138746a.jpg


b0775c63403677092cdf1dfb33e45719.jpg




I then proceeded to heat up the plastic liner in the affected area (Clean spot in picture below) as I would heat it up and it would become plyable I then massaged the area with a wet towel in order to mold it back and out of the way giving me more clearance. Move the material around slowly don't heat the area up to much to fast or you can melt it, apply even heat and cool towel pressure will allow you to shape it.


812b4a803e667bfcd9d07aa24678ee78.jpg




Next item to mold was the plastic trim, I heated the inside area to avoid messing with the finish on it, the lower channel is a bit to wide, so by heating it up and again applying pressure with the wet towel I was able to give myself the play needed to clear the tire.

0ed19ba5555a42fed94de0fa7ed10aaf.jpg




Once installed here is the final look, no one would know the difference and you don't have to chop up your fender liners.
fcf6410c52df9f9ab25744ee9e083f1b.jpg



I also had a little rubbing happening on the front part of the fenders, right on the line (marked with square) so I heated this section up evenly and applied pressure again with a wet towel (Cause its hot, and it cools it down into the shape you want to hold) did this process for a few minutes fine tunning moving the material, letting it cool getting in the truck and turning the wheel all the way and listen for the rub. Once you stop hearing the rub you've completed the project.

2ae7b7fc0869c755dbc19f5642751bcd.jpg




5c93ae6002aa4748a84cbbcd03e9a1c5.jpg




Enjoy your Beer and Rub free ride...
Cheers!
acf688d4281f5a2f151e066478ff5916.jpg
Do you were able to make this clear with just a 2” ready lift? -18 offset?

So if I was doing a Rough Country 5” lift. Would you think a 20x10-24 offset. On 35” tires. Would clear ok? Even if I had to do your process? Or would stick with just -18 offset?
Great write up by the way.
 

19BlkRam

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Do you were able to make this clear with just a 2” ready lift? -18 offset?

So if I was doing a Rough Country 5” lift. Would you think a 20x10-24 offset. On 35” tires. Would clear ok? Even if I had to do your process? Or would stick with just -18 offset?
Great write up by the way.

Thanks, it’s a ReadyLift 3.5 SST kit
Not sure how it would work with the 5inch lift chime in when you get it done.(y)
 

sims1dh

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Wow, did this mod today and completely eliminates the rubbing I had at full turn. My plan was to install the Daystar spacer and make a link. I’m thinking I don’t need either now. The truck is perfect at normal height. 22x12 -40 on 33/12.5/22. I’m going to ride it like this for a week and decide if I want to proceed with the other steps or not. IMG_4185.jpg


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

giff71

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So anybody know where to to get more of these little white clips? Apparently mine were too brittle..or i pulled instead of pushed, either way..i need two more..
 

Ellisstrong

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Wow, did this mod today and completely eliminates the rubbing I had at full turn. My plan was to install the Daystar spacer and make a link. I’m thinking I don’t need either now. The truck is perfect at normal height. 22x12 -40 on 33/12.5/22. I’m going to ride it like this for a week and decide if I want to proceed with the other steps or not. View attachment 24861


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Was wondering if the process looks exactly the same with fender flares? The original poster didn’t have fender flares did he?
 

RebelWraith

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Was wondering if the process looks exactly the same with fender flares? The original poster didn’t have fender flares did he?
Works the same way. But, instead of cutting off the tab just bend it up. Then you can drill a hole on the new vertical surface and reuse the body clip to secure the flare and spat.
 

RebelWraith

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So anybody know where to to get more of these little white clips? Apparently mine were too brittle..or i pulled instead of pushed, either way..i need two more..
This is the part number for the white nylon clip that holds on the fender flare spats:

68499020AA - $ 0.31

They are sold each, so grab a few extras.
 

Ellisstrong

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Works the same way. But, instead of cutting off the tab just bend it up. Then you can drill a hole on the new vertical surface and reuse the body clip to secure the flare and spat.
I imagine I won’t be able to make enough room to put my weathertech mudflaps back on the front...
 

murlanboy

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Has anyone powder coated their stock rims?


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