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new tires


loneranger04

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2008
Messages
86
City
Bronson,Floride
Vehicle Year
2004
Transmission
Automatic
hey all

well its that time in my rangers life for a new set of tires. i have a few brands/types in mind but i figured id come on and ask some opinions and see what every one else is running. maybe there is something that will sway my decsion. i have recently moved to the middle of no where as well so i need to take into mind rough terrain and dirt roads. so lets here what you have to say. i am also staying with OEM rims 15 inch to be exact.
 
I'm running BFG All Terrain T/As on my Ranger. Nice aggressive tread, smooth ride, quiet tires, grab on everything. I know snow isn't much of a concern in gainesville, but they don't even slip in snow. Deep mud is about all they aren't good for.

Best of all, they look awesome!!

That's what I'd go with.
 
I went from firestone destination tires to sumitomo all-terrain tires and there is no comparison. I live down a 3/4 mile gravel road and it is a ton better. I hope this helps you.
 
i second BFGs A/Ts i had them on another truck did pretty decent in the mud and real good on the street i loved them they lasted forever infact the truck they were on when i sold it they are still on it and i see him just about everyday. they last a long time
 
I just got a set of almost brand new p235/75/r15 goodyear wranglre but the old style that like a a/t tire

0069766201189_215X215.jpg

they are on sale for $60.00 bucks a piece
 
if you are looking for cheap tires and want to help the enviorment a place that sells retread tire its called treadwright i think not to sure its where i got my BFG A/Ts
 
I got mud king xt's 30 x 9.5's for 125 apiece. Talk about grip. I live down 2.5 miles of gravel. I like em
 
Michelin LTX M/S. I loved the first ones so much, I bought them again for the Ranger. They handle great in all types of terrain. Including snow, ice, sand, gravel, mud, and pavement. And they are quiet. Never had any road hum unless the road was grated. Lastly, if you drive a lot. These tires last a long time. It is not unusually for these tires to last beyond 80K miles when taken care of. A Ford E-150 had them stock. Drove the van beyond 100K miles in 3 years before having to replace the tires.
 
WOW, sounds like every one here has a variety of everything. im really not intrested in retreads. but thanks for all the comments and inputs. its always a good time to here what fellow ranger lovers have to say.
 
Firestone Destination A/T are rated #1 on tirerack and arent too expensive. Cheaper than the BFG's too. My brother had them and loved them. Said they did great in pretty much every road condition. I will be getting a set soon for my truck
http://www.tirerack.com/tires/surve...th=31X&ratio=10.5&diameter=15&tireSearch=true

+1 on the Destination A/T's! :yahoo: :icon_hornsup: Last year I got a set upon the recomendation of a friend, and on the recomendation of my mechanic, who runs them ON HIS PERSONAL TRUCK!

It snowed about 1.5 inches here today, just enough to make the roads slick & messy. The 'Stones held the road like they were adheared with super glue!

My truck's a '94 2.3, 4x4 & stick shift (just so you can compare), and I don't have any weight in the back. These tires grip like a pitbull onto a t-bone. When the do start to slide, it's in a very predictable and controlable way. On the way home, I went into a snow-covered parking lot for some, ahem, "vehicle control pratice." It took some doing to break the back end loose!

As for longevity, It looks like I'll get close to 75,000 out of this set, easy!
 
A couple years back I went looking for new tires for my Ranger. Since I work construction and often have to get off the road on muddy jobsites and so forth, I didn't want a street tire and I didn't really want the noise of a mud tire since I drove the highway to college. I wanted an AT with bite (besides, I had a set of muds intended to use as winter treads).

BFG AT tires didn't look aggressive enough for my taste. Neither did some other "AT" tires and some mud/snow tires.

Then the guy at the tire shop showed me some Sport King radial AT tires. Nice open tread pattern, but not quite a mud with factory siping. I put over 50k on 'em and loved them, they completely outperformed my expectations, they did great in every condition except deep mud or snow, and even then they'd do some clawing. I could break 'em free on wet pavement an such, but it usually wasn't a problem.

Now Sport Kings have gotten a lil more pricey, so I went looking elsewhere for treads for my F-150. I'll probably go with Mastercraft Courser CT's or Cooper Discovery ST's, both looked like the nice open and blocky tread pattern I like.

My dad always ran aggressive treads on the rear of his dump trucks, a blocky traction tire because they did a lot better than the all-season treads that everyone wants to put on that sort of thing. That I can remember I never managed to get his dump truck stuck (F-350 with trac-lock rear, 2wd) or any of my trucks stuck with tires that either he picked or I picked with the exception of when I shattered the front axle in my Choptop and was nearly up to the frame in mud.
 

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