Tires, Tires, Tires

Rocky

Well-known member
Apr 23, 2004
2,178
7
Red Sox Nation
I did 255/85 briefly until a breakdown on the way to a B2B killed it off......Was happy with the performance. Those same tires are on my d90 now. It felt like a dog in the mountains recently.....but the header to Y pipe gasket blew.....killing performance. MPG was awful tto.
 

knewsom

Well-known member
Jul 10, 2008
5,262
0
La Mancha, CA
Haha glad to see some dudes breathing some life into an old thread!

Last Disco 1 had pretty new 265/75r16 BFGATs and an OME 2" lift so th choice was made for me. About to land an 04 D2 that's bone stock. Plan on mostly using it for daily, but for some adventuring and utility as well while I turn the RRC into the epic beast she deserves to be.

Not sure if I want to lift it. Keep going back and forth between General Grabber APT in 265/60/18 (30.5") and General Grabber AT/X in 285/60/18 (31.5"). Since my D1 didn't seem ungainly or anemic with the same diameter as the AT/X, I'm feeling pretty tempted, but I also kinda want this to look like a mostly stock truck with a few clues that it's more than a grocery getter. You think I'll be able to wheel enough for satisfaction with the 265/60r18s? Or will I constantly be wishing I'd gone big?
 

Levi

Well-known member
Jul 27, 2004
559
26
Cheyenne, WY
Haha glad to see some dudes breathing some life into an old thread!

Last Disco 1 had pretty new 265/75r16 BFGATs and an OME 2" lift so th choice was made for me. About to land an 04 D2 that's bone stock. Plan on mostly using it for daily, but for some adventuring and utility as well while I turn the RRC into the epic beast she deserves to be.

Not sure if I want to lift it. Keep going back and forth between General Grabber APT in 265/60/18 (30.5") and General Grabber AT/X in 285/60/18 (31.5"). Since my D1 didn't seem ungainly or anemic with the same diameter as the AT/X, I'm feeling pretty tempted, but I also kinda want this to look like a mostly stock truck with a few clues that it's more than a grocery getter. You think I'll be able to wheel enough for satisfaction with the 265/60r18s? Or will I constantly be wishing I'd gone big?

Drive it for awhile and see how you like it compared to your old lift and take it out a couple times and see if it's good enough for you before you lift it. Most of the dirt mine has seen was on the stock springs and it always did really well but I remember how nice that extra 2" was once I got it. I've been daily driving my DI for the last couple years and thought about taking it back to stock for that long forgotten ride before I bought my last set of tires.
 

salvvia

Well-known member
May 28, 2005
990
39
BIG WHEEL ROVN IN KNOXVEGAS TN.
Running 235/85/16 dick cepek extreme country on d1. Rear stock springs moved to front for 2"lift .Rear has 2" taller springs not sure the brand plus spring isolators on top and bottom of rear springs it makes a difference, no rub unless hitting a hard bounce. running a slim line rte on front or would have to probably do some trimming. They ride suprisingly quite on road for a mudder and do great on rocks and mud, just took them out to Windrock a couple of days ago. Summit racing had them for 668.00 for 5 delivered. had them mounted local for 80 bucks

http://www.dickcepek.com/tires/extreme-country/
 

mrbieler

Well-known member
Sep 15, 2004
71
13
Lost Angeles
Ran 215/85 for about 35k miles. Could get squirrely at highway speeds. Ran 235/85 for about 40k miles after that. Now running 245/75. I had to cut a little off the rear wheel sheet metal with 235/85's.

Running OME MD springs.
 

louielouie

Member
Jun 23, 2020
6
0
42.214014, -122.83402
The GF wanted tires that were a little larger (all about looks) and had the 3-peak/snowflake symbol and the price for the 265/70-16 was less than some other popular sizes. That said there was a bit of performance degradation with the 3.54 gears but they clear the fender wells with j-u-u-u-st enough room not to rub w/o a lift.
Gas mileage would probably be better if she used the cruise control instead of pumping the gas pedal all the time... :rolleyes:
 

TopperKenobi

Member
Mar 6, 2017
10
0
Ridgeland, MS
Bringing back this old thread.
I have a Disco II with 18' wheels. Got a 2 inch lift.
I have 255/55/18s right now.
I want to know if 265/60s KO2s would fit without major issues. Can I get some input about it from the experts?
Thanks.
 

rovercanus

Well-known member
Apr 24, 2004
9,643
244
I'm running 285/75-18 Ridge Grapplers on my 2004 D2 with 4+ RTE springs. Only trimming was to the rocker skirts front and rear.
I have an RTE front bumper and castor corrected arm in the front. The rear has also been trimmed for a Bill Muetze rear bumper (same as RTE).
 
Aug 20, 2007
2,727
45
Nashville TN
what's the latest and greatest MT or AT that people are liking? I'm looking at 275/65/18. I'm 90% street driving, but Tennessee has mud and I do plan to start wheeling again next year.
 

mgreenspan

Well-known member
Feb 28, 2005
4,723
130
Briggs's Back Yard
I really liked the Yokohama Geolandar AT G015. But if your concern is mud then I’d recommend just getting a second set of wheels and a set of dedicated mud terrains. An AT will only clear so well and won’t do much better in mud than a highway/all season truck/SUV tire.

I tend to think of ATs as Rocky Mountain/western mountain trail tires or for someone who actually spends the majority of time on dirt and gravel roads. Otherwise a highway tread is your best choice for economy, noise, and longevity for normal use.
 

SCSL

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2005
4,144
152
I second what Matt said. No AT is going anywhere in TN mud. But they’re great on western slickrock. I think two sets of wheels/tires is the best way to go rather than a compromise option. And probably cheaper in the long run (not to mention the contribution to your overall enjoyment).

However, if that’s not an option, if I was wheeling a street rig here in TN, I would probably look at Toyo Open Country MTs and Mickey Thompson Baja MTZs, which served me pretty well before I went bias ply. I’ve both seen and experienced side wall blow outs with BFGs on the trail, east and west, and am not a fan (for a truck that sees a lot of trail use). I’m also probably in the minority in liking Interco Trxus MTs. Theyre a bitch to balance but are a great all around tire on the trail, and siped. Just don’t air down too much in deep mud ruts. The sidewall doesn’t flex enough and wants to pop that bead when it gets squished.
 

Blueboy

Well-known member
Apr 20, 2004
3,205
459
Back in the USA; Rockwood, PA
I’m also probably in the minority in liking Interco Trxus MTs. Theyre a bitch to balance but are a great all around tire on the trail, and siped. Just don’t air down too much in deep mud ruts.
Had them 235/85-16 on a ‘93 Rangie and a great overall tire. Could not keep them in balance for more than a couple months.