OT - Truck Tires

Submitted by Dennis on March 21st, 2023 at 4:02 PM

Any pickup owners have recommendations for brand/model of truck tires? I have a 2013 F350 SWL. I do mostly road hauling but occasionally see some mud/snow being in Michigan.

I'm not super concerned about budget, but want something high quality that lasts. I'm thinking BF Goodrich All-terrains, but that's based on what my old man has always liked, so just checking if tech has progressed since the early 2000s.

rob f

March 22nd, 2023 at 10:36 AM ^

How are Falken car/SUV tires? 

I'll need to replace my Subaru's Pirelli tires fairly soon (probably within the next 6000-10,000 miles), and while I'm satisfied with their ride and handling, they've worn much more quickly than the OE Yokohama tires that lasted 70000 miles. It's looking like I'm likely to get not much more than 45000 miles out of the Pirellis.

milk-n-steak

March 21st, 2023 at 4:13 PM ^

BFG KO2

Replaced the tires on every truck I've had with them very soon after purchase.  Good all around, last pretty well and air down nicely at Silver Lake if you happen to be there 

stephenrjking

March 21st, 2023 at 4:24 PM ^

I got General Grabber ATXs in November and they are just as good as the BFG AT KO2s they replaced for a bit less $. Fantastic in the snow, among other things. I’m delighted with them. 

bsgriffin1

March 21st, 2023 at 9:11 PM ^

Bridgestone Alenza plus are great all season tires that last long if you're on pavement most of the time. If you want a more aggressive tire that will grip better for winter and for some off roading, then I'd say go with the Bridgestone Dueler Revo line.. One of the best set of rubbers you can get and definitely won't even need to think about winter tires with that set on your truck.

chrisu

March 22nd, 2023 at 8:56 AM ^

Agree on Dueler Revos. Went through three sets on my last truck (185,000 miles on those three sets). Daily driver, some Michigan off-roading, and trailer hauling. At the time they were the winner based on performance/price, but lately they are close enough in price to KO2s and a few other excellent choices that it really comes down to what's most important - miles, looks, etc. 

For the OP, given the truck is an F350, I'd lean to something suitable for the potential loads the truck would see. That may know a few contenders out.

dmarch

March 21st, 2023 at 4:45 PM ^

I run Michelin LTX on my 2015 Superduty in summer as they are very quiet and I don’t really off-road.  In winter it’s Nokian Hakkapellittas with studs.

I run Toyo Open Country AT3 on my 80 Series Landcruiser and love them in the summer. I find they slip around quite a bit in winter.

I live in Big Sky, MT

trueblueintexas

March 21st, 2023 at 4:46 PM ^

I moved from Texas to Minnesota and had a rear wheel drive truck. Man was that fun!

At the time, the best all season tires I found were Nokian Rotivas. Not sure what the current Nokian models are, but they were great tires in the snow and didn't wear down too quickly being all season. 

mgoaggie

March 21st, 2023 at 5:13 PM ^

I really liked my Toyo Open Country A/Ts. Good for road noise, last a while, obviously not mudders, but they were good when I went offroad. Decent price, too.

Edit: I should mention, I'm in Utah so I'm driving in snow ~4 months out of the year, and they handle it very well. 

XM - Mt 1822

March 21st, 2023 at 5:36 PM ^

we have a handful of F350's, all SRW.  michelin LTX for the long haulers, though one of them i put BFG's on in the winter.   and cooper all-terrain for the one that stays local 100% of the time.  no complaints, solid value, mileage seems good in context. 

Schembo

March 21st, 2023 at 7:48 PM ^

I put Falken Wildpeaks on my F150 because of all of the hype online about them, but I don’t care for them.  I didn’t really get much better winter traction on them than the stock tires. 

hunterjoe

March 21st, 2023 at 8:19 PM ^

KO2s are great. You made a good choice there. Have had KO2s, Wildpeak and now run Ridge Grapplers. Of these 3 the KO2s were my favorite. The WPs were great tires just don’t wear as well. The RGs are too aggressive IMO.  Look great but aren’t a great all terrain type.  I will be strapping on some Toyo open country IIIs when these wear out. 

mgobleu

March 21st, 2023 at 8:45 PM ^

Maybe not the post you’re looking for, but the last 2 sets of tires I’ve bought have come from Facebook, new on factory wheels.

There’s a burgeoning industry of re-sellers  on FB, getting take offs from dealerships and selling them for cash. Usually you can get a set for around 12 to 1600, which isn’t exactly a savings, but compared to $1100 just for tires, you can end up with a pretty inexpensive spare set, or you could sell your old set for 6-800 bucks and end up getting your truck re-shoed for cheap. 

mgoblue78

March 21st, 2023 at 9:47 PM ^

Don't know nothin' about truck tires. What I do know about is tractor tires. And the one and only thing I know about tractor tires is that they make a fantastic kid's sandbox. You buy an old tractor tire, drag it home, and fill it with a yard or two of clean beach sand. Indestructible - do when they're toddlers, it will last 'til they're off to college. Hell, it will last to your grandkids, other than the occasional sand topoff. Who am I kidding, it'll last to your great grandkids. 

 

 

Dennis

March 22nd, 2023 at 10:17 AM ^

Reminds me of this stitched tiktok that was a city guy saying "and farm equipment like combines can cost up to $100,000." And then the video cut to two farm boys talking to eachother saying "what can 100 grand get you on a combine?" the other farm boy goes "the fuckin tires." Lol

drjaws

March 22nd, 2023 at 12:30 AM ^

No matter what anyone says do not get all terrain tires or mud tires or whatever from any company. Don’t care the company.

I do a bit of hauling but mostly just loading the bed with wood, concrete, rocks, etc. unless you’re trying to climb muddy hills, on a dirt road, get highway truck tires. I have pulled other trucks (2500, f250 etc) out of a ditches in the middle of winter with a ram 1500 with highway tires. They all had AT or mud tired to look cool.

Unless most of your driving is off-road just buy a solid set of highway all weather truck tires. Bridgestone or Michelin.

michelin makes a phenomenal truck tire btw. Have run them for years on numerous trucks and have never had a traction issue in Kalamazoo, northern Ohio, northern Michigan, etc

teldar

March 22nd, 2023 at 10:19 AM ^

I have a cousin who is extremely concerned with the look of his tires. Always buys off roads or aggressive ATs. They have half the tread left when they're loud enough he can barely stand to drive his truck so he buys new tires.

I suggested he buy a road tire because the last longer and be quieter and have fine traction for driving off into a pasture which he does occasionally and he bought another set of off roads.

I have a 13 F-150 which currently has Goodyear eagles sport AS. I've driven it in pasture and in the snowstorm with 6 in of slush on the ground. Smooth quiet riding tire with good traction. I live in Columbus and have driven to Dayton for work all winter. Bad weather, I've taken the truck. 

Schembo

March 22nd, 2023 at 12:05 PM ^

You hit the nail on the head here.  I live in a rural town, tow a boat and a camper trailer around the State.  I also drive alot on dirt roads and two tracks getting to farm lakes hauling ice fishing equipment around.  A/T tires serve no real benefit but adding looks to the truck.  Most guys in my town have AT tires on a lift, but the farmers and people that actually need their trucks for work purposes don't run them.  A good crossover tire will be fine in the snow and give better ice traction and be much better for towing.  I also just recently read a couple of weeks ago that these lifted trucks on bigger tires are wrecking havoc and limiting the life on the new 9/10 speed transmissions.