Lots of info on here since I posted - this is a great reminder and is actually the reason I can get a smoking deal on a set of BFG’s some Texas hunter ordered them and then bailed and never came to get them at the local shop. The owner asked me if I wanted them when I was in getting an alignment. It’s good to make friends and utilize the local shop!
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Samuel L. Jackson as Jules Winnfield: Oh, I'm sorry. Did I break your concentration?
All true, I guess my point was that they do actually wear well as per your prior mileage and go anywhere the other tires will comments on the Michelin.
I’m on my second set of E rated Wildpeaks, best all around tires I’ve ever had for hard mountain use. Im hard on tires and go where most don’t in a 1/2 ton truck though. I run studded Nokians in the winter now. The Falkens are actually better than the Nokians in deep, wet, slushy snow but the Falkens don’t even come close performance wise in other winter conditions. They aren’t bad but especially don’t do anywhere near as well under icy conditions.
Best price on E rated winter tires is Nexen. Anyone have any experience with them?
Is it radix panax notoginseng? - splat
This is like hanging yourself but the rope breaks. - DTM
Dude Listen to mtm. He's a marriage counselor at burning man. - subtle plague
That link doesn't apply to the Hakka's. AFAIK, most tire mfgs. don't offer mileage warranties and very limited warranties for workmanship that normally aren't more than 12 months or 2 years at best on dedicated winter tires.
If you bought a Discount Warranty Cert, they only cover 3 years.
I have seen that type of weather checking on UHP tires. Maybe some UV damage depending on the method of storage?
"We don't beat the reaper by living longer, we beat the reaper by living well and living fully." - Randy Pausch
Where do you interpret that? The list of tires is for treadwear life only. The way I read it, all of their tires get a 5 year workmanship warranty to 2/32” of an inch, and jmed is at 4 and 9/32”. This could possibly be a workmanship issue.
Isn’t UV rot usually more uniform across the sidewall? I’m not an expert, but that sidewall looked pretty clean and free of cracks or other degradation. That said, if it’s a multi compound construction, then maybe the sidewall compound is more UV or heat resistant than the tread? Either way I feel it’s worth at least working the warranty process and having the manufacturer explain to the dealer whether the degradation covered or not, and why.
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"Strapping myself to a sitski built with 30lb of metal and fibreglass then trying to water ski in it sounds like a stupid idea to me.
I'll be there." ... Andy Campbell
My father in law put Wildpeak AT3Ws (not Wildpeak Trails) on my mother in law’s Forester. It’s already got the OSU Beaver sticker … all it needs is a Thorns FC flag and rainbow stickers to really represent our state?
In any event it gives me a half chub every time I go to their house [emoji6]
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"Strapping myself to a sitski built with 30lb of metal and fibreglass then trying to water ski in it sounds like a stupid idea to me.
I'll be there." ... Andy Campbell
i landed on wildpeak twice prioritizing winter performance and 1 tire setup. but my car is a lot heavier. scary on true ice in a top heavy 4runner but otherwise I am going into winter season 3 on my second pair (5 tires rotating at 5k). they have done well in a lesser of evils scenario.
but i was also camping in the sticks every weekend at purchase time and driving a pass to ski in the winter. i think i have 40k on them and some solid miles on rocks that scared me, lots of dirt/gravel. and most of the last 10k on some sweet highways.
as mentioned upthread i am going to dedicated winters soonish cuz reasons. mostly cause i live on a N facing hill and notes above
in my quest for the best, walmart recently cancelled my order for 285 hakka’s. desperation shopping soon
or maybe you’ll get a review of season 3 winter performance come april, idk yet
Thanks for the replies guys. During summer they are stored under a N facing deck under a tarp - an extremely sheltered location. I stored my blizzaks for the truck right next to them with no ill effects. I’m gonna take the tires down to discount tire (I had only previously called and described the condition) and show them the tires and talk about the warranty as described above, even tho it appears that snow tires are not included. Will report back.
Last edited by jmedslc; 10-27-2023 at 07:18 AM.
They are included in warranty. Just not for treadwear and miles (I.e., tread will last until ____ miles). But they are under warranty for workmanship to 5 years and 2/32” of an inch tread, which you are both under. Properly stored tires that are cracking at the tread only and not the sidewalls looks like a workmanship issue to me.
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"Strapping myself to a sitski built with 30lb of metal and fibreglass then trying to water ski in it sounds like a stupid idea to me.
I'll be there." ... Andy Campbell
The Nokian Hakka 8 SUV for my wife’s car had a similar issue, but not nearly as bad. They were like 4-5 years old and needed to be replaced anyway. The unused full size spare was NOT cracking like that so it’s not simply time/storage. Always garage stored.
In hindsight, I probably should have tried to warranty them instead of just replacing. Good luck jmed.
Just about to year 3 on my e rated KO2s on my tundra, they still have a ton of tread left ( I don’t drive a lot, 10-12k miles a year ), but we just got a few inches of snow and they were completely terrifying coming down a mountain pass.
Debating on either Blizzaks or studded Hakas. I’ve read quite a bit about how loud the studded tires are,I’ve never owned a pair ( or any dedicated winter tire , but can they really be louder than KO2s with 20k on them? Anyone run either of these 2 on a tundra? Thinking the studs might be overkill, but I do live on a steep road and would always have to use 4wd with the KO2s going up, and I would creep down the hill in first gear when it was snowy or icy.
The other option I was looking at was studding some general grabber AT…
I guess I’m all done white knuckling around with all terrain tires. Any input or experience would be appreciated
I’m goin with E rated Wrangler Duratrac ATs on my Tundra with a camper on it. They do pretty well year round for me. I’ve had snow tires w/o studs a few times and honestly they weren't much better than my old KO2s. I really feel like studs are pretty unnecessary unless you dont have 4wd/awd. Of course I am in CO where the snow is much different than the east coast i assume.
Yeah I’m sure the weight of the camper helps a ton too. I put a few 70lb sand bags in the bed, but I don’t think they do shit. The ko2s were great the first two winters, not so much anymore.
We get the occasional big dump, but most of the winter is a few inches at a time which turns icy. Good ol east coast!
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