I want Pizza Cutters (tall skinny tires)
#16
Administrator / Severe Concussion Aficionado
Havent had many issues with Toyo MT's. Buddy of mine got 50k out of his. Not bad for a mud tire.
I put 20k on my set on my mega before lil bro got em. Hes put around 20k on them since then and they are still wearing well.
Next weekend Im putting a set of 35x12.50 Interco M16's on my truck. Buddy of mine has them on his 07 and hes selling it. Tires have about 18k on them and well over half tread. Giving them to me with the dually spacers for a grand. Bit bigger than I wanted, but cant pass on the deal.
#17
Registered User
I miss my Toyo AT's and will be getting ATII's when my Toyo MT's wear out. It's going to be awhile as they're wearing great.
I lost 1.5-2 mpg easily with the aggressive tread.
Really wish somebody made a 275-80-17 in a e-rating. I doubt fuel will be heading south,so less rolling resistance would be a plus.
I lost 1.5-2 mpg easily with the aggressive tread.
Really wish somebody made a 275-80-17 in a e-rating. I doubt fuel will be heading south,so less rolling resistance would be a plus.
#18
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Changing tire height ain't so hot for handling, braking and component life. Going skinnier than OEM definitely isn't good for braking, steering response either. Fuel mileage isn't helped either.
If there are those of us who regularly get above 100k on a set of OEM spec tires then it's really hard to beat the appropriate size.
MICHELIN (LTX series) or BRIDGESTONE (Duravis series) ought to be where you start & end, IMO.
Stock spec and pressures reflecting loads on premium tires = no headaches and lowest cost per mile.
The numbers in my sig are no accident. The right brand and size is central to a low cpm of ownership & operating costs where performance is always at least as good as stock.
.
If there are those of us who regularly get above 100k on a set of OEM spec tires then it's really hard to beat the appropriate size.
MICHELIN (LTX series) or BRIDGESTONE (Duravis series) ought to be where you start & end, IMO.
Stock spec and pressures reflecting loads on premium tires = no headaches and lowest cost per mile.
The numbers in my sig are no accident. The right brand and size is central to a low cpm of ownership & operating costs where performance is always at least as good as stock.
.
Just me thinking, but i would guess two tires same height, the skinnier tire would get better mileage.
I also wish they made a 235/90/17 tire or a 255/90/17. The manual tranny guys with duallys would buy them up.
In the snow, nothing beats a narrower tire.
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cnielsen4130
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02-10-2011 05:56 PM