I love the guys laughing at "Runflat wheels".
Runflat wheels have higher bead retention lips to keep the bead seated while driving with no air, called EH2 (and less common EH2+).
Take your runflat equipped wheels and look behind them, voila a EH2 stamping. Yes, you can run a non-SSR (self supporting runflat) on a EH2 equipped wheel. Every manufacturer in the world requires runflat equipped cars to have EH2 wheels.
Try running a runflat tire with 0psi on a non-EH2 rim, and watch that bead come off. BMW is known for standardizing EH2 on most wheel models, like the style 123 (OEM equipped on E60 5-series).
What's that stamping on the face?
Oh what?! A diagram clearly illustrating EH2 and EH2+ bead retention lips:
F10 5-series wheels:
And another one (EH2 + also pictures, uncommon but becoming new standard):
Mini Cooper JCW wheels with EH2:
Arrogance = FAIL
same here, OEM wheels (runflat compatible) but I use standard tires,, for the price difference, if I have a flat, I will call a towing and buy a new tires...
This is why I love this forum
My summer wheels, E60 5-series style 123 in 18x8 ET20 on my E46, are EH2 certified but I run non-SSR tires (DZ101's). Regardless of what tire you mount on a EH2 or EH2+ wheel, they're sketchy to pass the shoulder hump because it's so much bigger compared to a standard hump. Same thing when removing them, while breaking the beads, often times, you have to collapse the sidewall around half the rim (low pro's) for the bead to pass the shoulder.
I have a Minardi Formula 1 wheel with the 1st version of EH2 application. On top of having an extended hump, there are knurls where the bead sits making the tire impossible to move around on the lip. Pretty cool actually.
so when my mechanic was removing the Runflats he said it was a bitch to take them off, was it really the runflat making it hard to remove from the wheel or the EH2 bend or wtv the hell lol
just curious thats why im asking now