When Dodge went from 16" to 17" wheels, it was to clear larger disc brakes which moved the calipers farther out radially.
Agreed, that is what happens on most platforms... Other than a super-sized wheel like the currently popular 20s, OEMs increase the wheels sizes across a line of trucks for a reason.
Is this the case with the 2014s with the move to 18" wheels as well? The 16" wheels wouldn't fit a 2003 up which originally came with 17" wheels as the 16" wheels would hit the disc brake calipers. I don't know if that's the case with trying to go back to 17" wheels on your truck, but it's certainly one more thing to check. Rusty
I was pretty sure that recent OE 17" wheels would fit, but not positive, hence my post here for input which I greatly appreciate. Nobody was (yet) able to say with certainty that OE 17s would fit, so before I spent my afternoon driving 240 miles roundtrip I did do come more checking...
Internet searches showed similar questions but no definitive answers. Maybe the 2014 trucks are too new, so few truly know the answer, in addition to the fact that most people are up-sizing wheels and tires not wanting to go to a smaller wheel. I called a local Dodge dealer and a parts guy was very helpful, looking up the front and rear rotors and calipers for a 2500, both 2012 & 2014... he said they did not change, they are the same number. This was encouraging and I almost jumped in the truck for a wheel buying road trip. Then I did some backup research online trying to build a new 2500
Cummins on NADA.com. Even a stripped Tradesman, both 2WD and 4WD, were automatically coming with 18" wheels, not 17 inch. This was a red flag.
Crawling under my truck with a tape I confirmed that the backspacing on my OE 18" steel wheels is approx. 6.25 inches. The caliper clearance on the rear axle with 18s (over 1 inch) looked fine, I'm confident 17s would fit on the rear. The caliper clearance on the front is closer...it was difficult to see and measure around the control arm, but the clearance looks like about 3/4 inch. An OE 17" wheel might fit, just, but I'm not confident enough that I want to drive hundreds of miles and spend hundreds of dollars to check.
In the long run, the stock 275/70R18 size may be hard to beat, there are many tread choices in this size and they carry lots of weight for a SRW light-truck tire, so I may just forget this 17" idea. A few weeks ago I bought a set of '13 OE Ram aluminum 18" take-offs from a Craigslist seller, the ones that look like Horseshoes welded together (standard on the 3500 SRW Laramie). A friend in Portland procured them for me and I'll get them in a few weeks when we pass that way on a car trip.
I wanted 17s because I have a set of 255/80R17E Cooper S/T MAXX tires I'm testing, they are currently on my V8, geared & locker AWD 4Runner. I'm been thinking of swapping them to the new Ram, both to continue testing the tires but also to see if I will be able to pickup a little extra mpg with the slightly narrower tire.
The research continues….
James