<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">As the my honourable friend Adam correctly say's a lot will do with suspension height and tyre choice if the tyre rub or not.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">Not really. There is no tyre choice, per se, if you keep the proper rolling radius and I can't see where suspension height comes into it unless you are making a low rider.
The tyres to use is easy to work out:
185/70 x 13
195/60 x 14
205/50 x 15
215/40 x 16
225/30 x 17
You can also get close with these fitments:
195/55 x 15
205/45 x 16
215/35 x 17
If you want to use 205 width, then these are the choices:
205/60 x 13
205/55 x 14
205/50 x 15
205/45 x 16
205/40 x 17
It is simple to workout with 215 widths.
Nice website here:
http://www.alloywheels.com/Tyre_Calculator
I have the old Montego Turbo alloys on my TR7 V8 and the wheel offset if just about OK, although the tyres seem to rub the strut, but only under extreme cornering forces - the static gap is around 1cm. This is using 205/50 x 15 on a 6" wide alloy. This is probably the area you need to check. The most expensive part was buying 16 new wheel nuts!
Here is a picture showing the closeness using Montego alloys:
Here is a picture showing the same car with Compomotive FH alloys that are 7" wide and with an offset that moves the alloys out to the maximum - the rear wheel arches need 'rolling up':
Note that the front arches don't need modification with the compomotives.