CK5
Register an account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members.

Best large snow tire?

sled_dog

1 ton status
Joined
Sep 3, 2002
Posts
16,867
Reaction score
3
Location
Austin, TX
I am thinking ahead to my Suburban project. It will be my daily driver and it will start in Winter so I am gonna need some good tires for the snow. I was thinking 35x12.50 MT/Rs but I realized, no 16.5" rim option. The rims I have and really like are 16.5" rims. My other thoughts are 35" Mud Terrains and 35" A/Ts. Anything else a really good all around tire especially in the snow? Thinking I may just forget the 16.5" rims and sell them or something.
 
I don't own them but BFG A/T's are *THE* best tire I've ever driven in the snow, and don't do bad in the mud. I don't think mud terrains will work as well in the snow. I want me a set of A/T's!! /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif
 
I hadBFG all terains on my Jimmy last winter, and it skated around plowed roads /forums/images/graemlins/dunno.gif
 
The Goodyear Workhorse radial does pretty good in snow, has a semi-aggressive tread, and lasts a while. However, I don't think they make them larger than 33" diameter.
 
[ QUOTE ]
I don't own them but BFG A/T's are *THE* best tire I've ever driven in the snow, and don't do bad in the mud. I don't think mud terrains will work as well in the snow. I want me a set of A/T's!! /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif

[/ QUOTE ]

I loved my BFG A/T tires in the snow. They did OK off road like any A/T tire and required a lot of wheel speed to clean themselves. If you get a mud tire, look at the Toyo's or maybe the new cooper ones, they seem to have a lot of siping and a really nice tread pattern. /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif
 
I had a set of Dunlop Mud Rovers when I was stationed in ND and they did great in 2'+ snow and they were O.K. in mud. just my .02
 
I have had 3 sets of BFG All Terrains and all were 31's. I liked them for snow and good for rigs that are used more on road than off. Good long lasting tread.

I have Radial Long trail TA's on my turd exploder now. They are 235 75 15's and have 50,000 miles and will still easily last me thru the winter this year.
 
I have no specific brand or type preference--all I can say is if you want to go in the snow--go with tall skinny tires--I've tried using big tires like 36" Dick Cepecks and such--they got me stuck faster than you could say get the snatch strap!.I used 8.75x16.5 tires,old bias ply coopers with aggressive snow tire tread pattern,(they were nylon cord tires,felt like square wheels first 10 miles on a cold morning--but you could drive over curbs and other stuff without punturing them,they were like iron!)and I was not only pulling other trucks out of snowbanks,I could plow the snow that their trucks would just hit and slide sideways,because the wide tires climb up onto the snow and it floats all over the place,the skinny ones dig down to the pavement and pull you through.I like studded tires,around here we often get ice storms more than snow sometimes,being near the coast,but they dont seem to be as popular as they were years ago,getting hard to find,I like them on black ice--I have had some storms where I had to use tire chains on all four wheels!--not many trucks could outplow mine with those on it!. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
I like the BFG AT's...the difinatly have a good tread design for the snow but I would want a skinnier tire for icey roads.

You might look into Hi Tec Retreading's green dimond tires. I beleave they have there 35's out now and the green dimond tread works almost as good as studs but is legal year round. Plus they are cheep /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif
 
Are you talking about snow covered streets or off-road on fresh 6" plus snow covered roads? If it's just snow covered roads then you want a A/T that will allow plenty of places for snow to pack in. Snow sticks to snow so a tire with lots of siping will work better on snow packed roads. For deep fresh snow you can either get a w-i-d-e tire to float or a TALL tire to dig, but it has to be tall enough to hit bottom before your axles bottom out. If all else fails I put the chains on. 4 wheels locked up with chains will get you out of almost any snow.
 
the largest skinniest tire I know of is a 235x85 (its about 31.5" tall) or a 255 85. Their pretty skinny, about 8-9" wide. I'll be getting a set of the 285x75x16" MT with green diamonds next week so I'll let you know how they are. I know it will be kinda loud, but I dont know if it will bother me over the drone of my diesel.
 
No offence, sounds kinda like driver error....

Maybe they were bald?

Do you guys use sand or salt all up in 'dere? /forums/images/graemlins/rotfl.gif
 
No offence tooken.
They were not blad, they are 32" tall by 11.5 inches wide. And they still slipped. /forums/images/graemlins/dunno.gif
 
2 of the best tires I have ever seen in snow of any kind, icy roads, etc... were a set of 33x10.50 Swamper radials that were siped, and a set of the 36" Buckshot radials that were siped.
Boggers and Ground Hawgs are the worst 2 tires I have ever seen on slick roads.
 
Top Bottom