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Tires that resist freezing :annoyed:


TexCaliBII

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U.S. Military - Veteran
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Oct 6, 2010
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Hey anyone from, or have lived in, cold regions got a recomnedation for tires that at least resist freezing. Reason I ask is I have off name 31s on my 87 and they freeze into a D shape at about -30F. And that is way annoying for the couple blocks it takes to return to round. I also wonder what that is doing for the longevity of my shocks, nothing good I'm sure. :sad: However the good ole Wranglers I have on my Chevy don't freeze until about -50F. Of course at those temps eveything freezes.... I've looked on line but funny enough no tire company details when their particular tires freeze. I'm goingto talk to a couple tire places around here but wanted actual experience info afor I for any new tires. Anyway any info/ideas you guys/gals can toss my way I'd appreciate it.
 
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Are you running bias ply tires? They can exhibit what you're talking of - usually more than belted radials.
 
The softer the tire the more they will get square-tire syndrome. My Kevlar sided Wranglers get it something fierce. It seems the cheaper older steel-belted radials held their round shape better.
 
Any tire will do that... Mine dont cause I'm down in anchorage and the coldest its gotten is like -15 i think. I have a set of wintercat SST's and they haven't frozen yet. BUt to help reduce the D shape I recommend getting them nitrogen filled as it doesn't expand or contract in extreme temperatures.
 
i've got a set of bfg ko's and a set of bfg km2's and it's been -35 here, with absolutely no d shaping that i've noticed... the ko's are nitrogen filled and the km2's are air
 
I always thought it was cuz the colder air was denser and thus less tire pressure letting them run 'flatter', prolly need to add alittle air pressure. Otherwise maybe a winter rated tire.
 
I wouldn't worry about the shocks. At those temperatures they're probably frozen also, and the tyres will be round before the shock start to move.
 
There is only one real solution to avoiding tire freeze... Buy real winter/snow tires. At about 40 degrees standard tire rubber compounds start to lose their elasticity, and by the time you hit 0, non-winter tires lose a lot of their traction capabilities
 
Any tire will do that... Mine dont cause I'm down in anchorage and the coldest its gotten is like -15 i think. I have a set of wintercat SST's and they haven't frozen yet. BUt to help reduce the D shape I recommend getting them nitrogen filled as it doesn't expand or contract in extreme temperatures.

What are you doing in Anchorage I thought you were in the cosmic hamlet.:icon_confused:
 
Nitrogen does help, I though about filling my MTR-K's but even a little drop is enough for these heavy tires.
 
Thanks for the info. Yeah I should put winter tires on it but paying for winter and "summer" tires is more than I can afford right now so I'm just dealing with it. The tires I have on it are Discount Tire Pathfinder All Terrains so of course I knew I was not getting the best tire out there but they have held up well. I got them in Utah and we drove the truck 4K miles up here to AK and have driven here for the last 3 years and the tires are still good. They just do not take the deep temps well at all. Looks like I might have to invest in better tires anyway. Many folks up here have N2 in their tires and it helps but -50 is till -50. Thanks again!
 
Thanks for the info. Yeah I should put winter tires on it but paying for winter and "summer" tires is more than I can afford right now so I'm just dealing with it. The tires I have on it are Discount Tire Pathfinder All Terrains so of course I knew I was not getting the best tire out there but they have held up well. I got them in Utah and we drove the truck 4K miles up here to AK and have driven here for the last 3 years and the tires are still good. They just do not take the deep temps well at all. Looks like I might have to invest in better tires anyway. Many folks up here have N2 in their tires and it helps but -50 is till -50. Thanks again!

You must be at Eielson or Wainright or worse yet Greely lol. We have Newfoundland/ Iceland members here I wonder what they run. I have heard that Nokian Hakkapeliitta tires stay the softest in the xtream cold.
 
Yeah,
I'm at Eielson. Thanks for the tire name/info. Wonder how much those are to get in Alsska? AKA the dark side of the moon when it comes to shipping charges.:annoyed:
 
Yeah,
I'm at Eielson. Thanks for the tire name/info. Wonder how much those are to get in Alsska? AKA the dark side of the moon when it comes to shipping charges.:annoyed:

I see them all over in Anchorage start checkin tire stores or Nokians site probably has a store locator. And yea I was at Greely ugg back in the day it was a tiny outpost. Hey you still have the A-10's there or are they bye bye.
 

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