I do too. I just put on Cooper Rugged Treks.Nice. I prefer something a bit more aggressive
I do too. I just put on Cooper Rugged Treks.Nice. I prefer something a bit more aggressive
Looking good.I do too. I just put on Cooper Rugged Treks.
I lived the same experience with Jeeps over the yearsI'm a slow learner and, except for my last 2 trucks, I would switch to AT tires every time I wore out my factory tires. Took me a while to figure out the only thing AT tires gave me was a cut in fuel economy of about 2 MPG and a worse ride quality.
I'm a slow learner and, except for my last 2 trucks, I would switch to AT tires every time I wore out my factory tires. Took me a while to figure out the only thing AT tires gave me was a cut in fuel economy of about 2 MPG and a worse ride quality.
From what I'm seeing online if i don't need the off road traction the off-road AT tires aren't really a good fit for me.I lived the same experience with Jeeps over the years
The firestone destination at are a good pick, also yokohama geolanader g015From what I'm seeing online if i don't need the off road traction the off-road AT tires aren't really a good fit for me.
I'm trying to maintain on-road traction and add the 3PMSF for better winter traction. Any suggestions for that?
I like thoseI do too. I just put on Cooper Rugged Treks.
I didn’t really lose any with mine, but I made sure to get STD load range.I'm a slow learner and, except for my last 2 trucks, I would switch to AT tires every time I wore out my factory tires. Took me a while to figure out the only thing AT tires gave me was a cut in fuel economy of about 2 MPG and a worse ride quality.
I didn’t really lose any with mine, but I made sure to get STD load range.
Rolling resistance is a huge factor for mpg in tires. Thats part of why HT tires get better mileage. At tires are more purpose built. But this is why i keep mentioning the firestones and geolanders, they have a lower rolling resistance than a lot of at tires.I don't believe this. The more aggressive thread alone will cost you fuel economy.
"In fact, 35-50 percent of the rolling resistance can be attributed to the treads. The shallower the tread pattern, the more fuel-efficient the tires are as there is less resistance."
I definitely struggle with this decision. Prefer the look of the more aggressive AT, but know I don't need them. At least I have a pretty short commute. I've had my truck since April and only have 5000 miles so far. Plus I have been offroading for many years and don't mind a noisy tire. Especially since my hearing is pretty poor.Rolling resistance is a huge factor for mpg in tires. Thats part of why HT tires get better mileage. At tires are more purpose built. But this is why i keep mentioning the firestones and geolanders, they have a lower rolling resistance than a lot of at tires.
Talk about low miles our 2021 has 13,239 miles must have been the two trips to Denver.I definitely struggle with this decision. Prefer the look of the more aggressive AT, but know I don't need them. At least I have a pretty short commute. I've had my truck since April and only have 5000 miles so far. Plus I have been offroading for many years and don't mind a noisy tire. Especially since my hearing is pretty poor.
Rolling resistance is a huge factor for mpg in tires. Thats part of why HT tires get better mileage. At tires are more purpose built. But this is why i keep mentioning the firestones and geolanders, they have a lower rolling resistance than a lot of at tires.
Co signing? Or just adding more value to your one off comment so perhaps a member doesn’t discount the point since its only from one member? It was valuable info and deserved a bump. The real question here is why it bothered you enough to even address it…odd.Not sure why you responded to me since all you did is say exactly what I said. My "I don't believe this" comment was directed toward the claim I quoted that someone got the same milage from an AT tire as they did a HT tire.
AT is definitely one of the more crowded categories of tire.I'm struggling too. There are so many choices. Maybe they are all about the same or maybe I'm just looking for a unicorn.
Great advice. I would actually put my priorities in the same order as you. Mileage, on road dry/wet and snow are the biggest for me.AT is definitely one of the more crowded categories of tire.
Helps to start with what you prioritize - weight, appearance, size options, brand, snow performance, highway performance, etc.
Figure out what's important to you, shortlist a few options using Tirerack.com scores and reviews. Lots of ways an AT can be "Good" but not ideal.
E.g. for me Priority #1 is light weight, then steering/handling, then snow traction, then off road capability, appearance and last price.
Great advice. I would actually put my priorities in the same order as you. Mileage, on road dry/wet and snow are the biggest for me.
What are you running?