โAug-19-2015 08:39 AM
โAug-22-2015 01:20 PM
up2nogood wrote:Huntindog wrote:Danattherock wrote:
Regarding warranty, nothing I'm doing will void warranty.
Dan
Oh, it will void some of the warranty.
Larger tires WILL impart more stress on some components, such as the tranny, brakes, U joints steering components, etc. They will also lower the trucks ratings. How much is debatable, but it for sure will be operating in parameters beyond what it was designed for and tested for. Any component that the manufacturer thinks the larger tires may impart more stress on will likely have the warranty voided.
That said, there can be some things you may be able to do when buying the truck that can help.
When I bought my 96 Dodge 1 ton SRW, I wanted bigger tires. So I selected the optional 4.10 gears over the standard 3.55s. That simple cheap decision allowed me to use larger tires with the close to the same performance of the stock tires. It also protected the tranny and u joints from extra stress I did have premature service/replacement needed on the wheel bearings and brakes, which were adversely affected by the larger tires... Wanna play gotta pay.
As for leveling kits.. I am not really a fan of them for what you are wanting to accomplish. Since pickup trucks tend to be high in the rear when empty, leveling kits were invented to raise the front to match the rear. This works OK when empty. Put a load on the rear though and it will sag in the rear. Air bags can fix that, but it just shows how one mod can require the next etc. And my experience with air bag reliability has been less than I would expect. Seems like one is always leaking.
I also think that 35s are more than needed for 4x4 use. People who go that big are generally doing it for looks. The performance from larger tires starts to diminish after about 33" on full size trucks.
I have to disagree on warranty, I was in a Ram dealership yesterday , sitting on the showroom floor was a new Ram 2500 with at least a 4 inch lift on 35's , I doubt anyone would buy that truck without full warranty. I see those new trucks setup that way all the time, its a dealership thing.
โAug-22-2015 12:45 PM
โAug-22-2015 11:21 AM
Danattherock wrote:
Please do tell me where I plan on taking the truck. I'm curious exactly what you know about my intended usage.
Danattherock wrote:
You say you know where I'm willing to take a $40k truck?? How the hell is this possible? And I'm buying a $60k truck numb nuts.
Danattherock wrote:
Your either psychic or a crayon eater, I vote the latter. You need to slow your roll this morning and have a big cup of STFU.
Danattherock wrote:
My goal is to get a minimum lift/level that will allow the tire size I want and avoid rubbing. 35x12.5x18 won't fit stock without rubbing.
Danattherock wrote:
Never said I needed lift for better off road performance. You no reading SOB.
Danattherock wrote:
This forum is useless due to all the crayon eating MF's and blowhards like you. I have not seen a thread yet that wasn't destroyed by dip shits like you. 8-10 well intentioned intelligent folks start a conversation and then some cross eyed poop smearing dwarf chimes in fabricating BS that was never said to justify their rant somehow. It's pathetic.
โAug-22-2015 11:19 AM
โAug-22-2015 10:35 AM
โAug-22-2015 09:57 AM
โAug-22-2015 08:55 AM
โAug-22-2015 04:21 AM
Danattherock wrote:
Likely a high quality 2-4" suspension lift kit at most, not for looks, but clearance of the 35x12.5x18 (or 20") Cooper ST MAXX I want.
โAug-22-2015 12:48 AM
โAug-21-2015 02:09 PM
โAug-21-2015 12:13 PM
โAug-21-2015 10:30 AM
โAug-21-2015 10:12 AM
โAug-21-2015 10:08 AM
โAug-21-2015 09:55 AM
Huntindog wrote:Danattherock wrote:
Regarding warranty, nothing I'm doing will void warranty.
Dan
Oh, it will void some of the warranty.
Larger tires WILL impart more stress on some components, such as the tranny, brakes, U joints steering components, etc. They will also lower the trucks ratings. How much is debatable, but it for sure will be operating in parameters beyond what it was designed for and tested for. Any component that the manufacturer thinks the larger tires may impart more stress on will likely have the warranty voided.
That said, there can be some things you may be able to do when buying the truck that can help.
When I bought my 96 Dodge 1 ton SRW, I wanted bigger tires. So I selected the optional 4.10 gears over the standard 3.55s. That simple cheap decision allowed me to use larger tires with the close to the same performance of the stock tires. It also protected the tranny and u joints from extra stress I did have premature service/replacement needed on the wheel bearings and brakes, which were adversely affected by the larger tires... Wanna play gotta pay.
As for leveling kits.. I am not really a fan of them for what you are wanting to accomplish. Since pickup trucks tend to be high in the rear when empty, leveling kits were invented to raise the front to match the rear. This works OK when empty. Put a load on the rear though and it will sag in the rear. Air bags can fix that, but it just shows how one mod can require the next etc. And my experience with air bag reliability has been less than I would expect. Seems like one is always leaking.
I also think that 35s are more than needed for 4x4 use. People who go that big are generally doing it for looks. The performance from larger tires starts to diminish after about 33" on full size trucks.