โSep-26-2022 07:40 AM
โOct-03-2022 07:46 AM
valhalla360 wrote:time2roll wrote:
Low profile is fine until you go off pavement and encounter some rough situations. Most trucks just run around the city so the tires are just to look good.
Low profile is great for cornering but tends to eat up the treads quick.
Makes sense in a sports car...not so much for a big pickup.
โOct-03-2022 06:14 AM
time2roll wrote:
Low profile is fine until you go off pavement and encounter some rough situations. Most trucks just run around the city so the tires are just to look good.
โOct-03-2022 05:45 AM
โOct-03-2022 01:55 AM
way2roll wrote:
Any suggestions on a decent new tire that won't break the bank? 275/70/18 E rated for hauling the FW.
โOct-02-2022 06:15 PM
way2roll wrote:Unfortunately "Wrangler" includes several lines of tires ranging from top to bottom. I recommend top line GY or get something else. I am running the GY Wrangler AllTerrain with Kevlar and the perform and hold up well in all conditions.
Apparently the OEM Goodyear wranglers on my F350 are not the best tires.
....Snip....
What's with all the low profile tires on trucks. Doesn't that render your truck pretty useless?
โOct-02-2022 05:38 PM
way2roll wrote:
Apparently the OEM Goodyear wranglers on my F350 are not the best tires. A little over 30k miles and they are worn out already. For some reason I recall getting 50-60k miles on tires on my previous F150. Are larger trucks that much harder on tires or are these just cheap?
Any suggestions on a decent new tire that won't break the bank? 275/70/18 E rated for hauling the FW.
I've seen guys on CL selling pretty new take-offs. I wouldn't mind going with a little taller tire and rim if the price were right but seems like most guys aren't selling E rated ones. What's with all the low profile tires on trucks. Doesn't that render your truck pretty useless?
โOct-02-2022 09:06 AM
โOct-02-2022 08:56 AM
โOct-01-2022 05:12 PM
โOct-01-2022 01:46 PM
Grit dog wrote:
All that said, skinny little tires on the front of a heavy diesel dually combined with very few running true steering tires on LDTs is one of the worst recipes for long tire life.
โOct-01-2022 01:06 PM
โOct-01-2022 10:06 AM
โOct-01-2022 10:05 AM
blt2ski wrote:JIMNLIN wrote:
I ran the OEM Michelin LT265/70-17 E LTX AS on my '03 2500 Dodge/ Cummins for 113k miles before they finally wore down close to the wear bars. The tire had hard rubber with very poor traction on any wet/frozen surface.
The same OEM Michelins in a 16" LT E on a new '01 2500 Dodge/Cummins lasted 84k miles close to the wear bars.
Went with a Bridgestone Revo at that time. Huge gain in traction. Ran them for 68k miles till they made too much noise for my use.
I'm rural out here with lots of highway miles with very little city miles. I'm a conservative driver and don't square my corner turns like I see many LDTs/cars/suv drivers do.
I've always got over 60k mile out of light truck tires on 3/4 and one ton LDTs even the ones I had in service (hiway).
I still use Bridgestone or Cooper AT type tires on my LDTs.
Jimlin
People doing any kind of highway use will always get more miles on tires than someone like me that does maybe 20% highway. I'm always scrubbing the front tires on turns, stop and go one in micro spinning or skidding the tires. This can easily make a 2-1 ratio of Mike's per tire highway vs city use.
Even the rubber compound, tread design etc make a difference
Marty
โOct-01-2022 08:30 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
I ran the OEM Michelin LT265/70-17 E LTX AS on my '03 2500 Dodge/ Cummins for 113k miles before they finally wore down close to the wear bars. The tire had hard rubber with very poor traction on any wet/frozen surface.
The same OEM Michelins in a 16" LT E on a new '01 2500 Dodge/Cummins lasted 84k miles close to the wear bars.
Went with a Bridgestone Revo at that time. Huge gain in traction. Ran them for 68k miles till they made too much noise for my use.
I'm rural out here with lots of highway miles with very little city miles. I'm a conservative driver and don't square my corner turns like I see many LDTs/cars/suv drivers do.
I've always got over 60k mile out of light truck tires on 3/4 and one ton LDTs even the ones I had in service (hiway).
I still use Bridgestone or Cooper AT type tires on my LDTs.