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Pickup truck tires?

Theralfinator

Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
22
Location
St. Johnsbury, VT
Hi guys, just wondering what kind of luck people are having finding good tires for your pickups. Something that finds a good compromise between MPGs, treadwear, and of course good performance towing and driving off-road. And by off-road, I just mean job sites, not mud bogs. :cool:

My current BFG All Terrain KO2's are just about spent. I'm considering getting some Goodyear Wrangler Duratracs but I figured it might not hurt to see if someone on here might have stumbled across the holy grail of tires before I go spending money.

Edit: I'm running an 08 Chevy 2500HD ECLB 4X4 Duramax.
 
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Mother Deuce

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 17, 2016
Messages
1,603
Location
New England
Ram 1500 4x4 with the top to my rollaway, a honda gen, chainsaw and crew tools, 20 inch wheels with 10 ply Toyo Open Country M/T went 63,000 for me. Probably would have went 70. Great tire real hard, real aggressive and real noisy. They are a little more expensive to operate fuelwise I got around 16 with the hemi. As opposed to 20 with the Goodyear Wranglers that were on it new.
 
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Theralfinator

Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
22
Location
St. Johnsbury, VT
I've only gotten about 17,500 out of my KO2s. To be fair though, I've clearly been running them overinflated. The centers are worn real bad but there's a fair amount of tread left on the sides.
 

CM1995

Administrator
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,373
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
Running BFG's KO2's on 2 - F350's. I get about 20K on them but we are running 10K lb's GVW on just the trucks and pulling 14-15K behind them on a regular basis. That's about all I expect to get out of an all terrain tire.
 

cuttin edge

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2014
Messages
2,733
Location
NB Canada
Occupation
Finish grader operator
I notice the company putting Michelin tires on most of the work trucks now. Expensive, but they seem to last. My mother's 2010 Ford escape came with Michelin tires, and while it's not a work truck, one thing that really impresses me is that there is no weather cracking
 

CM1995

Administrator
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,373
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
Goodyear Wrangler ATS, really good all terrain tire, quiet and good treadlife.

But I still live in a 16" tire world.....lol

Ed

Yeah forgot to add I'm running all 18's.
 

Theralfinator

Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
22
Location
St. Johnsbury, VT
Running BFG's KO2's on 2 - F350's. I get about 20K on them but we are running 10K lb's GVW on just the trucks and pulling 14-15K behind them on a regular basis. That's about all I expect to get out of an all terrain tire.

I guess I'm not that far off from your mileage then. The truck's about 7500 pounds but it hauls 24k-26k gross from time to time.

Goodyear Wrangler ATS, really good all terrain tire, quiet and good treadlife.

But I still live in a 16" tire world.....lol

Ed

I'm also still rocking 16s.
 

KSSS

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2005
Messages
4,336
Location
Idaho
Occupation
excavation
I run Nitto EXO Grapplers. I get about 45K out of them. It is a heavy, rugged tire with great traction Winter or Summer. I have had four sets of them now. Another tire I like is the Falcon Wild Peak AT3. It is the most popular replacement tire at my rural tire shop. Farmers and Ranchers love them. I have a set on a half ton and I like them. I have set of Cooper SST's on a dually that have great traction, they are wearing ok.
 

ianjoub

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 22, 2018
Messages
1,468
Location
Homosassa, FL USA
I run Toyos on all of our vehicles. My truck and my wife's truck both wear the Open Country AT II. They wear reasonably well, are quiet, and have good traction both on pavement and off road.
 

heymccall

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 19, 2007
Messages
5,377
Location
Western Pennsylvania
I've got a fleet running Hankook RF10 or RW11 year round. 32k miles a set, all pulled @ 3/32 left max.
Only have one running the new RF11.

Out of them all, the RW11 has proven to be the best at everything.
 

MarshallPowerGen

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 26, 2017
Messages
448
Location
Northwestern USA
Occupation
Generator Technician & Equipment Mechanic
Those Goodyear Wrangler Duratracs you're eyeing will do you great. Ran them on 2 loaded down service trucks (Ford 250 & Chevy 3500 dually, both 4x4) driving all over the Northwest of the US running up and down mountains to work on cell site generators. Ran good on the highway, great in deep mud, only had to dig out in the snow once (my fault, sunk into a snow drift heading to a mountaintop site I should've taken a Snowcat to). Didn't wear out to fast either.

Run Cooper Discoverer Pros on my personal truck, and they're pretty good. Ran Hankooks in winter on a RAM service truck in the winter, I never got stuck, but damn they were loud!
 

seville009

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2008
Messages
220
Location
CNY
Use Duratracs too; mainly for snow - great in slush and deep snow. Studded ones on my plow truck. Not the greatest on the hard pack snow on the roads (the non-studded ones), but I can just adjust my speed , etc.
 

02SILVER

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2011
Messages
71
Location
Florida
88K miles on a set of Toyo open country RT
14' Ram 3500, jobsites and towing heavy almost every day. Rotations every 7-9k miles
 

Bumpsteer

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2009
Messages
1,341
Location
Front seat on the Struggle Bus
Occupation
Mechanical designer
My plow truck always gets radial mudders, BFG or Dunlops, depending on how fat my wallet is when I need them. No real difference in life, 25k and they're shot, BFG's are quieter, actually silent in a 235/85r16.

Back in the bias ply days, Firestone town & countrys ruled the plow truck world. To bad they never carried that tire over to a radial.

Ed
 

Tim Burke

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2019
Messages
75
Location
Ponce De Leon, FL
When I bought my 15 Ram Power Wagon in 17, it had Duratracs on it and they were shot at about 48K. I’ve had 6 Rams going back to 85 and I’ve never been a fan of Goodyear’s tires. I’ve rarely gotten even 50K out of them and their rain performance gets sporty once they harden up a bit. I’ve put Michelin LTXs on the last couple of trucks and I especially like their rain and braking performance. They do just fine in the sugar sand here on the Gulf Coast, but I don’t generally take my trucks into muddy places. I haven’t kept a truck long enough to wear a set out yet. There’s 30K on the current set and they still look somewhat new.
 

Camshawn

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 25, 2017
Messages
598
Location
Langley BC
Occupation
retired
I am very happy with the KO2’s on our Dodge. We run about 1/2 time with a camper that pushes 10,000 lbs. The snow and rain performance is very good with these tires. We have about 30,000km on them and would estimate another 30,000 before they are done depending upon time of year ( new tires if they are getting close as snow approaches). We have run Michelin, Continentals, Toyos,and what ever Dodge had on originality. We will by KO2’s again. Cam
 
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