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Reminiscent of a spoked chariot wheel this proven design is the latest in a series of rugged 4WD wheels from ROH – Australia’s leading 4WD wheel manufacturer. Available in stunning black-machined finish, this all-terrain wheel surpasses the Australian standards for off-road wheel performance. Trojan is now available in 17x7.5 to suit Ford Ranger, Mazda BT-50, Mitsubishi Pajero, Toyota Prado and Hilux. ...more info
Bruce Garland Racing Team backs up Dakar category win with an impressive result in the Australasian Safari using ROH Trojan wheels.
Sydney's Bruce Garland and Harry Suzuki have raced to another strong result in the 2009 Australasian Safari with third place overall after 3500 gruelling kilometres through outback Western Australia.
Garland and Suzuki, who also have an 11th outright to their credit in this year's Dakar Rally, brought their Bridgestone-backed Isuzu D-MAX Ute home in third place after a successful appeal against a two-hour time penalty. Bruce Garland Racing team trusted ROH Trojan to tackle this gruelling Australian Outback event.
ROH Modular is back and we are taking orders now! You can now use our on-line PDF Modular order form to make ordering easier for you and your customers ...more info
ROH now supplies 5 new face-lift wheels for Toyota Camry and Aurion, plus a 19x8 option wheel for Aurion. This continues a strong business relationship between Toyota and ROH, further re-enforcing the fact that ROH supplies high quality products at a competitive price.
We are constantly asked how to measure wheel backspace.
1.) Firstly if the rim width is marked as an 8”, the true width of this wheel is actually 9”. Remember that you must add 1” to get the physical width of a wheel.
2.) Then multiply this figure by 25.4 to convert from inches to mm e.g. 9”x25.4 = 228.6mm
3.) Divide this figure by 2 to get the 0P `Imaginary’ centre-line axis of the wheel.
e.g. 228.6/2 = 114.3mm
4.) Add or subtract the offset to this figure to get the measured offset/backspace e.g. if the offset is 45P add 45mm to 114.3 = 159.3mm backspace. Conversely is it is a negative offset, e.g. 10P subtract 10mm from 114.3 = 104.3mm backspace.
It’s that simple!
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