NorskieRider
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Any suggestions for LT tires for winter use?
I live in hilly southern Minnesota and winter is an annual certainty here. While we don't get much more than 60-70 inches a year, it tends to stick and turn into slop and ice. So I'm not looking for tires which will dig out of many feet, but rather those which will provide traction around town (stopping, turning), climbing slick steep hills and (importantly!) slushy ice wintry mix at highway speeds on my 84-miles 3x a week commute.
On past car and trucklets I've always had dedicated winter tires (usually Blizzaks) so I didn't have to compromise on handling, comfort and treadwear the other nine months of the year. I'm tempted to go this route again on the RAM, however, I'm not sure that makes sense considering that the RAM is not a vehicle I'm going to be much concerned about handling. The compromise might be in towing stability (i.e. more plies) vs. snow traction rather than handling and treadwear. The new "all-weather" category is another aspect to consider.
Which leads me to my question:
Instead of running a dedicated set of snows, does it make more sense to run one set of decent tires in all conditions? Like the Vredestein Pinza's, which are both "Severe Snow Service Rated" and load range "E", for example.
But I suspect that Blizzaks will probably out-perform the Pinza's in the slop.
Does the load rating affect comfort? i.e. are the 4-ply SL's more comfy than the 1-ply E's or ... does the vehicles size and weight make that a moot point?
Thanks in advance!
I live in hilly southern Minnesota and winter is an annual certainty here. While we don't get much more than 60-70 inches a year, it tends to stick and turn into slop and ice. So I'm not looking for tires which will dig out of many feet, but rather those which will provide traction around town (stopping, turning), climbing slick steep hills and (importantly!) slushy ice wintry mix at highway speeds on my 84-miles 3x a week commute.
On past car and trucklets I've always had dedicated winter tires (usually Blizzaks) so I didn't have to compromise on handling, comfort and treadwear the other nine months of the year. I'm tempted to go this route again on the RAM, however, I'm not sure that makes sense considering that the RAM is not a vehicle I'm going to be much concerned about handling. The compromise might be in towing stability (i.e. more plies) vs. snow traction rather than handling and treadwear. The new "all-weather" category is another aspect to consider.
Which leads me to my question:
Instead of running a dedicated set of snows, does it make more sense to run one set of decent tires in all conditions? Like the Vredestein Pinza's, which are both "Severe Snow Service Rated" and load range "E", for example.
But I suspect that Blizzaks will probably out-perform the Pinza's in the slop.
Does the load rating affect comfort? i.e. are the 4-ply SL's more comfy than the 1-ply E's or ... does the vehicles size and weight make that a moot point?
Thanks in advance!

