Couldn't find the listing, is this wheel still available? Need a spare and hate the space savers. ThankseBay under '16 inch alloy wheel' good spare wheel!
Couldn't find the listing, is this wheel still available? Need a spare and hate the space savers. Thanks
I got 'most' of the spare wheel holding mechanics from a scrap yard (eBay so I didn't see the whole content) but I also bought two alloys with tyres as my car had a buckled front wheel when when I bought it (visible flat on one part of the rim from possibly a heavy kerbing?) Someone on here I'm sure said that an alloy has a different mount or local holder as its shape is slightly different from a steelie.
The buckled wheel was on the front and caused a vibe at 42-48 mph. Wise guy at the MOT said it would stop if he swapped it to the rear which he did. The vibe was far worse! I switched it for one of the 'new' alloys and all was well so I got the tyre swapped too and now I have a smooth ride again
If anyone has experience of the alloy mount and could post a pic I'd be grateful to see what if any difference there is between the two. I got the three floor mount brackets and the winding mechanism with one grey plastic wing-bolt device. Not sure if I need any more bits other than a second plastic wing-bolt. Has anyone got a pic of the parts from the catalogue? Might help more than just me..
However, if an alloys supplied car has a steel as a standard for a spare then I have an s/h alloy for sale!
Btw Sue, I think there isn't a space saver option for us, it's the yucky tyre ruining gunk and a compressor supplied at new. I have that in the boot - nice compressor but I would rather call the AA than use the gloop.
R-V-M
To add to the confusion...
I also couldn't find a definitive answer whether a 15" spare with different tyre was a suitable spare if you had 16" Fiat alloys. Many seemed to have gone down this route though, so I got a 15" "nemo/fiorino" steel wheel with a 185/65/15 tyre from an online scrapper, It certainly fits fine and visually matches size (rolling circumfrance/diameter) of alloy + its trye, though I haven't driven on it to be honest.
Did find if you bend down its just visible below the bumper line when its hung beneath the boot floor and wonder if I shouldn't have got one of the spacesavers on ebay instead. Also suprised only thing bearing the weight of the spare when stowed is a thin steel cable no thicker than a bicycle brake cable. There's the two thumb screws to secure the hoist plate to the wheel just in case it moves but its only the steel cable taking the weight, unless I've set it up wrong, but as far as I can see from diagrams etc, I haven't. Would abbreciate any input on this ?
Also when sourcing a jack beware the dimensions of the spot above the rear wheel arch where its supposed to be stowed. I got a Fiat jack kit from Ebay for a punto/multipla and the compressed jack was to long to fit there. Pit because it came in its own Fiat bag with accessories etc and now it takes up valueble boot floor space. Anyone know where can get a smaller one suitably sized for the Qubo designated stowage spot?
To add to the confusion...
I also couldn't find a definitive answer whether a 15" spare with different tyre was a suitable spare if you had 16" Fiat alloys. Many seemed to have gone down this route though, so I got a 15" "nemo/fiorino" steel wheel with a 185/65/15 tyre from an online scrapper, It certainly fits fine and visually matches size (rolling circumfrance/diameter) of alloy + its trye, though I haven't driven on it to be honest.
Did find if you bend down its just visible below the bumper line when its hung beneath the boot floor and wonder if I shouldn't have got one of the spacesavers on ebay instead. Also suprised only thing bearing the weight of the spare when stowed is a thin steel cable no thicker than a bicycle brake cable. There's the two thumb screws to secure the hoist plate to the wheel just in case it moves but its only the steel cable taking the weight, unless I've set it up wrong, but as far as I can see from diagrams etc, I haven't. Would abbreciate any input on this ?
Also when sourcing a jack beware the dimensions of the spot above the rear wheel arch where its supposed to be stowed. I got a Fiat jack kit from Ebay for a punto/multipla and the compressed jack was to long to fit there. Pit because it came in its own Fiat bag with accessories etc and now it takes up valueble boot floor space. Anyone know where can get a smaller one suitably sized for the Qubo designated stowage spot?
Thanks for comments Red Van Man. I figured the steel cable must be sufficiently specified for the job, just looking for a bit of reassurance as a DIY'erEspecially after lifting the weight of the full sized steel wheel and tyre out of the boot and thinking of the jolts the cable will experience over all the local speed bumps the council loves to put on our roads!
Please see attached online pic for "official" jack stowage spot. In it you can see the black bag containing jack and tools strapped to two lashing points above the left (looking from back of car) rear wheel arch. I have these lashing points and its where the pump and gunk were lashed in my Qubo, but the jack I've acquired is too long to fit in that spot which is frustrating.
Have already looked under passenger seats and know what you mean about lost stowage potential. Very tempted to simply snip the wires and lengthen run so can reroute them properly. Would you simply get extra cable from a motor factors? Presume there is (a) standard cable(s) spec for car electrics in same way as for home electrics? Think I must have seen your Smart drawers comment elsewhere, because have already scoured ebay for any kind of universal drawer.
Although I'm pleased with my Qubo so far, not going that extra yard to achieve the perfect design, seems to be a little bit of a theme with Fiat, especially having come from the quality standards of a Honda Civic. The under seat stowage/wiring is an example of this. Quality of switchgear is another, it looks great but the stalks have a "bendy" feel to them and there's no positive click to the buttons on the steering wheel and radio, in fact I find them quite awkward to press properly. Similarly the position of the fog light switches - they are so low and so close to the menu switches, you have to take your eyes of the road while you hunt for them. And don't start me on the key fob... why 3 different buttons when you only need one. If car is locked, press it to unlock the car or if car is unlocked press it to lock the car. Lost count of the times I've left the Qubo unlocked, having pressed the "Unlock" button in error and assumed car was locked because I've seen the lights flash. Pressing the Lock button twice to use the deadlock is pointless (it should activate however you lock the car) as is the third button to unlock the boot only - simply unlock all doors and boot, no need to unlock boot alone. Anyway rant over - as I said I am pleased with car in general, just disappointed as someone with a bit of italian blood that our national car manufacturer hasn't quite designed the perfect utility car for lack of only a little more thought.
Still have a few jobs to do on my Qubo and was very interested in your and Luigi's posts on fitting cruise control - I do miss this facility as the perfect way of not falling victim to speed cameras. Just have to unscrew my steering column shroud and see if I have the prerequisite cruise control socket there to plug a control stalk into. Is it really that simple? I haven't found any contradictory research, but seems such an easy fix.
Also toying with idea of fitting 68R socket for satnav, or was considering a simple cigarette lighter socket instead since, TomTom map updates seem to be a bit of a rip-off. All to avoid trailing wires lol. Suppose it comes down to whether the extra media display (ipod & music etc) of the Tomtom outweigh the extra Tomtom setup costs. Any views welcome![]()