|
|
|
|
|
by jacquesm
1043 days ago
|
|
You should avoid that kind of thing regardless of the construction of your rims but to have one crack through such an interaction isn't normal. Rims are supposed to abrade or deform in such a situation, not crack and if they do crack that's a sign that the tire wasn't properly pressurized or that there was some kind of material defect. Hence my advice to check out the others because there may be more to this than 'just' an unfortunate interaction between the wheel and the corner kerb stones. Unless it was a particularly violent impact, of course. I've never had a rim crack under any circumstance in many, many kilometers over a lifetime of driving and if it happened on a relatively new design of a car I would immediately take it to the manufacturer, they may have overlooked something. Honda had a similar thing happen in the 80's when they sold a new model and it turned out the tires didn't quite fit the rims as well as they should have leading to way too many blow outs (because the tires ended up being able to sit still while the rims rotated inside them, which ate up the inner ring of the sidewall). |
|
However to your bigger point, that the wheels are poorly engineered for their use, tracks. This is the first rim I've ever had crack, and I've even had some nasty accidents. This is however our first set of EVs (I have a Kia EV6), and I really feel like VW made a lot of compromises. (The UI/UX is the worst I've ever experienced in a car)