qewrtyturdy
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I've never put new tires on a truck before they are needed. What are you guys doing with your OEM tires that still have a lot of tread life left? Do places offer to give you money for them?
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Idaho mountains here. Can't go wrong with Blizzaks - had them on 4 vehicles over the last 15 years. I recently switched to Continental Viking Contact 7's and am really happy with them.Ive always used Bridegstone blizzaks . Northeast adirondack area . Not Colorado snow totals but plenty cold and icy . My f150 is a snowmobile with the blizzaks . So was my expedition and my flex before that and my kids escape and subaru wrx are too . The f150 now has little change in mpg and still very quiet .
I'm wanting to sell mine, and just posted them on Nextdoor.I've never put new tires on a truck before they are needed. What are you guys doing with your OEM tires that still have a lot of tread life left? Do places offer to give you money for them?
This is not an attack but at least for myself I spend a good amount of time using my truck for 'truck things' which includes driving over passes, on dirt roads, launching boats on slippery ramps, light offroading on farm roads, towing trailers, accessing jobsites, etc. I've had two trucks where the stock tires that came on it were acceptable for year round duty and that was my Raptor and my 2008 superduty (came with a decent set of goodyear AT's). My life in snowy conditions or getting stuck is not worth it to me to just try to get some life out of a set of crappy factory tires. When I've spent ~75K on a new truck I'm not going to let $1,200 dictate how well I utilize it.I've never put new tires on a truck before they are needed. What are you guys doing with your OEM tires that still have a lot of tread life left? Do places offer to give you money for them?
I had the dealer swap the tires I wanted as part of the deal......If you didn't go this route usually tire shops will give you a $100/tire for trade-in.I've never put new tires on a truck before they are needed. What are you guys doing with your OEM tires that still have a lot of tread life left? Do places offer to give you money for them?
I installed Michelin Defender LTX M/S tires on my 2021 powerboost, in the stock 275/60R20 size and load rating. I've always had all terrains (BFG and Duratrac) on my 2014 F150 so I was concerned about the Michelin not having the mountain snowflake rating. In all honesty these LTX's may be the best handling tire in dry, wet, and snow conditions out of any tire that I've run. We go skiing almost every weekend, driving through south park and I've never had traction concerns. If you can get past the highway look of the tire I don't think that you would be disappointed in the LTX MS.Hey all, so I originally wanted to run 34s (Toyo Open Country) and do a level but with the gas mileage concern I'm wondering if I stick to the stock size and do a reverse level if there is a recommended tire for all weather (I live in Colorado and drive in the snow regularly) or if I should go for snow tires?
I Would suggest you talk to folks you trust on those.Not to hijack the thread, but I’m also going p rated tires for my power boost. I’m going for the Perelli scorpion all terrain plus. Great reviews on tire rack, 10 lbs lighter per tire than stock hankook’s and 3 peak snow rated.
The Falkens and the Coopers are my favorite all around AT tire. Falkens might be a tad better off road. The Cooper a tad better in the snow.Awesome. Thanks for the feedback. I think I just need to get comfortable with losing 1-2 MPG. I really didn't care about fuel economy in my last F150, not sure why I'm being so picky about it now.
I live in the mountains of Colorado, very similar climate to what you experience in Park City. I'll check out the Falken Wildpeaks.
I couldn't agree more. The Pirelli Scorpion ATR's that came on my 2021 XLT were the worst tires I have ever had. Absolutely worthless in snow, packed or fluffy. Dumped them and got Wranglers.I Would suggest you talk to folks you trust on those.
They were without a doubt the worst tire i have ever had in winter. Not even close.
Equally bad off road
I ordered LT tires on my F150 to be certain i didnt get pirelli's.
I run on Bridegstone blizzaks on all 4 in upstate NY . Snow/ice . Runs quiet and like a snowmobile...I picked up my new Powerboost last week from the dealer and am wanting to replace the factory 275/60R20 Hankook tires with something more appropriate for our Colorado winters (3 Peak Mountain Snowflake). I'm considering the following three tires in the same factory size:
Is anyone else running one of these brands of tires on their Powerboost in the factory size? I'm wondering what hit you noticed in fuel economy by changing from the lighter weight all season to a heavier, all terrain tire?
- Goodyear Wrangler Duratrac (had these on my 2014 F150, great grip in the snow, weak dry pavement handling tires)
- BFG AT KO3 (ran these on the 2014 F150 before the Duratracs, but were full of vibrations and caused all sorts of interior buzzing. They were also better handling in the dry but a little weaker in the snow than the Duratracs)
- General Grabber ATX (test drove a new F150 Tremor with these tires and was really impressed)
Wow.... I put 285/65 Ridge Grapplers on my PowerBoost and I only get about 15 mpg. Not lifted, just leveled. I am seriously thinking about swapping them out for lighter tires. If I was getting 23 mpg, I'd stick with them because I really like the look.295/65R20 Nitto ridge grapplers on Powerboost and leveled. E motor still kicks on, still get 23 mpgs when I feather it. Don't do that much though. Truck looks much better get compliments all the time. Coworkers fawn over it.