I’m not high enough.
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Rod has my favorite autofilled posts.
But i really appreciated the suggestion. I have a tire guy that can likely get me the used tire in right spec.
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Jeep Cherokee Trailhawk had firestone destination at tires on it stock. Got 55k on them, did great in everything from Colorado and Chicago could throw at it. Nothing wild but have a nice off-road look too. When the coopers on our f150 are dead I’ll replace them with the Firestones
This was the ultimate autofill. I didn't even look at the post, much less answered it.
Maybe during my mountain bike ride on fast Eddie's. Phone in my pocket, mind of its own.[emoji24]
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Just ordered a set of the Falken's. Discount Tire price matched Walmart's price, so about $147/tire.
And the Falkens seem to be on national backorder, so not sure what to do now, probably the Michelins? Hope for a rebate?
I gave into the Les Schwab guy pushing the "new" snowflake rated Open Range AT tire over the Toyo AT II this weekend. I'll report back once I get it in some snow and dirt. Kind of annoyed I let him talk me out of the better looking Toyo but know the snow rated tire will ultimately be better for our use the next couple of winters.
That being said, anyone looking for a good deal on my old 20" 6 lug wheels for 2009-2014 F-150? Includes some Nokian Rotiva AT at 60% tread (according to the tread depth indicator). Probably fine for this coming winter and also snowflake rated. Seattle area.
Snowflake rating=softer compound. Stickier when cold, wears faster when it’s warm. Pick your poison.
FYI, six-lug wheels are the same centerbore and bolt pattern on current-generation truck as well (i.e. any six-lug F-150 uses the same lug/centerbore), so those wheels would be fine up through a 2019 F-150. The thread pitch on the lugs / lug nuts changed with the 13th-generation trucks in 2015, but the spacing and centerbore are the same.
The rating isn't based on the compound, you are correct. But, AT tires with the snowflake don't tend to last as long as those without in my experience. I think it's that the manufacturer uses softer material to perform better in the cold.
Me, I have Cooper STT Pros siped on my LC and Cooper AT3s on my pickup and van. I run the tires all year and have no issues on snow and ice.
I'm sure there are a lot of good tires out there now but I've been using Coopers for the last 10 years or so and why change something that works well for the sake of changing.
Looking for reccs. This is my first time buying tires for my own car.
2015 RAV4 AWD LE: 225/65 R17, 102H
About to hit 35k on the original tires. Front currently 4/32, rear 3/32. Looking to buy a set of [edit] all-weather. Most of my driving is on city streets. Occasional highway driving, usually to get to the mountains on the weekends (which includes rough forest service roads to trailheads in the spring/summer/fall). Not looking to buy separate winter and summer sets. Local to Portland.
Also, do you recommend buying local at a place like Les Schwab or buying online at Tirerack?
Thanks.
Wasn't being snarky -- I was mainly justifying my qualifications to respond in the truck thread because I don't own a truck either. :)
So, now considering the Dynapro ATM RF10 (lot of fucking letters), based on other stuff in this thread.
Can someone explain the difference between this https://www.discounttire.com/buy-tir...m-rf10/p/19481 and this https://www.discounttire.com/buy-tir...-rf10/p/10824? Other than $34? Seems like one has a "P" in front of it, which I know to mean it's a P-metric tire (not that I understand what that is), and I guess the other isn't, but is that a real difference that explains the price difference?
My current tire size doesn't have the P, FWIW. And I'd love a tire for $130.
They're both standard load tires (the "SL" designation), which means they are both P-rated tires (P for passenger). No idea why one does not have the P designation. AFAIK if the tire has a SL or XL designation, it has to be a P-rated tire; I don't think that mark is used on any LT ("Light Truck") tire, which, instead, would most commonly have a C, D, or E rating.
https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiret....jsp?techid=55
The "OWL" means outlined white letters on one side -- if you don't like that look, put the letters facing inwards -- it is a symmetrical tread design, so it doesn't matter.
The $130 one has a 112T rating; the $170 one has a 110T rating. That is the load index rating. The higher the number, the higher the carrying capacity:
https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiret...180905211630:s
tl;dr -- buy the $130 one and be happy.
According to Discount Tire, the $164 version is a discontinued model that they leave on their website (not sure why it can't just say "discontinued" and not "order now, available in 3-5 days". In any case, the $130 tire is the one that is available. Given that the Dynapro ATM gets some good reviews in this thread, and given that it is pretty dirt cheap for a tire of that size (265/65/17), AND has the snowflake symbol, I went for it. Ordered and will be on the truck in the next few days.
Out the door for about $700, so can't complain (and have a $50 rebate coming). Nice to have some new shoes on.
Price went up to $142 but I got the $130 price.