Apr-24-2019 12:46 PM
Apr-30-2019 01:16 PM
Apr-30-2019 12:33 PM
Apr-29-2019 05:59 PM
Bradymydog wrote:
I recently purchased a new 2018 GMC 3500 HD SRW CC 4x4 Gas with 10800 GVWR. GRAWR is 7050. Stock 265/70/18 tires were rated 3525 lb ea. My fully loaded Bigfoot 25c9.4 with wife, dog and I with full fuel, ready to travel was 180lbs (90lbs/tire) under the max tire rating at 80psi. I was not comfortable with the safety margin. I opted to purchase (5) Cooper Discoverer AT3 XLT's size 295/70/18 rated at 4080lb/tire at 80 psi with 60K mile warranty. No mods were done to the truck to fit the larger tires, although my speedo now reads 3.5 mph slow at 60 mph. I recently completed a nearly 4000 mile round trip from MA to FL. I cannot say enough good things about the truck and tire combo. Both preformed great -the tires very very quiet with a nice aggressive tread. .
Apr-29-2019 04:17 PM
Apr-29-2019 08:39 AM
Apr-29-2019 07:13 AM
bighatnohorse wrote:
Opinion: Tire ratings are good to the very last drop.
In other words - when the tire is old and worn, it should still have near the same capacity.
2) Manufacturers build in a safely margin.
3) What road conditions will it see?
Personally, I think you're rig is good. Just consider the above and inspect the tires regularly.
Apr-29-2019 06:42 AM
Apr-28-2019 03:41 PM
Apr-28-2019 02:38 PM
Apr-28-2019 12:24 PM
Apr-28-2019 12:03 PM
CapriRacer wrote:Not sure where you are getting that info . I know on GM 2500hd for many years the grawr has been exactly what the oem tire rating is Times two .Marcela wrote:
Why do OEM rate capacity at 80% of tire rating?
Actually, it's the other way around: They select the tire capacity such that it meets the vehicle capacity at 80% of the tire's rated load. That's just good engineering practice. They do the same thing for nuts and bolts, but no one notices those.
Apr-28-2019 09:42 AM
Apr-28-2019 07:12 AM
Apr-28-2019 05:28 AM
Marcela wrote:
Why do OEM rate capacity at 80% of tire rating?