? on Truck Tires
? on Truck Tires
I have a 2005 Silverado 4x4 Ext. Cab and would like to put BF Goodrich All-Terrain T/A tires on it. The problem is that my truck has P265/70R 17 tires on it now but the All-Terrain T/A tires do not come in that size. However, the All-Terrain T/A tires are made in LT265/70R 17. Would the LT tires fit on my truck without a problem?
Thanks,
DIDS
Thanks,
DIDS
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Chris
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Yes they will fit no problemo
The LT's I believe are a 10 ply tire, it will ride a little firmer then the P series, but should last much longer.
The AT KO's have a severe weather rating which means they are great in the snow.
I just ordered Dunlop Radial Rover RVXT's LT 245/75/16, half the price of AT's becasue they are on sale right now, and they also have the severe snow rating
The LT's I believe are a 10 ply tire, it will ride a little firmer then the P series, but should last much longer.
The AT KO's have a severe weather rating which means they are great in the snow.
I just ordered Dunlop Radial Rover RVXT's LT 245/75/16, half the price of AT's becasue they are on sale right now, and they also have the severe snow rating
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Cerberus1027
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Yeah- you guys and Oswego County get dumped on more then we do- I think you usually avg about 200", right? That and the strip from Pulaski to Adams- I think it snows there about 9 months out of the year!!DIDS wrote:I hear you about the snow. I live in Syracuse one top city's for snowfall in New York.
DIDS
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Chris
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Thats what I'm taking off my truck, the Long trails suck in the snow, get stuck on flat ground with an inch of slushy snow, won't go up an incline in the snow.twwabw wrote:I've had the Long Trail T/A's for about 3 years or so on my wife's F150 4x4, and they've been great tires. They have about 45k on them and are still in great shape. Very good in snow too, and we get a lot in western NY!
Now if I had 4x4, i'd run them for another year, but to dangerouse with 30k on them, they are starting to loose their grip on dry roads, squeeling around curves and such
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Chris
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The LT is actually Light truck, it is a 8, 10 or 12 ply for trucks that haul or carry heavier loads, the p series is for average loading with 4 - 6 ply, not as long wearing and not suitable for heavy loading. The KO's are available in either format, P metric or LT metric, it is not a store designation but the loading capability of the specific tireYeOldeStonecat wrote: the LT rating is what they use on the metric sizing...they are designated with an LT at many stores.
P = light duty
LT = heavy duty
But I agree with you the AT KO's are one of the best light truck tires out there, pricey though
Mine are the best tires I've had in the snow. Had Goodyears (oem) and Michelin. Hated the Michelins- worse than OEM Goodyears, and that's pretty bad.Chris wrote: the Long trails suck in the snow, get stuck on flat ground with an inch of slushy snow, won't go up an incline in the snow.
Now if I had 4x4, i'd run them for another year, but to dangerouse with 30k on them, they are starting to loose their grip on dry roads, squeeling around curves and such
They do OKChris wrote: the p series is for average loading with 4 - 6 ply, not as long wearing and not suitable for heavy loading.
Observe everything...focus on nothing..
Chris wrote:The KO's are available in either format, P metric or LT metric, it is not a store designation but the loading capability of the specific tire
P = light duty
LT = heavy duty
But I agree with you the AT KO's are one of the best light truck tires out there, pricey though
According to the BFGoodrich site the KO's are only avaiable in LT metric. I use to have the KO's on my Ford Ranger when I had that. They were the best tires I ever had on a truck in the snow. Not to mention the occasional off-roading.
DIDS
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Huh..I don't recall ever seeing the KO's in the lighter type....always been LT...but then I always focused on the larger sizes, perhaps the lighter P rating never made it up there. //shrugChris wrote:The LT is actually Light truck, it is a 8, 10 or 12 ply for trucks that haul or carry heavier loads, the p series is for average loading with 4 - 6 ply, not as long wearing and not suitable for heavy loading. The KO's are available in either format, P metric or LT metric, it is not a store designation but the loading capability of the specific tire
P = light duty
LT = heavy duty
But I agree with you the AT KO's are one of the best light truck tires out there, pricey though
When considering the price....factor in that the BFG's tend to outlive just about all others. I drive my vehicles fast and hard..very hard. I'd probably go through 3x sets of regular tires within the same mileage as one set of the BFGs.
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f350mudder
will they fit.
i have 2000 F350 with a 6" lift I was wondering if anyone can help,will a set of 37x14x16.5 super swamper irocs fit on my truck with out causing fender damage,any info would be appreciated.thanks