255/100/r16 XZL tires on full size Dodge

Darwin

Explorer
Anyone have any experience with these tires? I saw some on 1st gen Cummins dually that Redthies posted a picture of. They look like they could be a great tall and skinny tire for a full size truck. I believe they are 36.1 inches tall and 9 inches wide. Maybe too narrow?
 

huntsonora

Explorer
Anxiously awaiting Kaisens negative response and his lecture as to how tall and skinny tires suck and your an idiot if you don't go with something stock or wider :victory:
 

Kaisen

Explorer
If you don't drive faster than 50 mph, and never need to make an emergency maneuver on the freeway, I think they are great choice. Have at it.
They are so great they're not even produced anymore.
 

Darwin

Explorer
You can get the Chinese knock offs on ebay for a decent price. I think they might measure out actually to 10 inches wide, not far off from a 285 75 18 toyo mt.
 

redthies

Renaissance Redneck
If you don't drive faster than 50 mph, and never need to make an emergency maneuver on the freeway, I think they are great choice. Have at it.

Man, I'm so lucky to be alive! I just moved my dually with 255/85-16s (the death trap size!) from one side of my driveway to the other!:wavey:
 

Kaisen

Explorer
Dually is different than single. And 255/85 is considerably different than 255/100. Great off road in certain terrain, I'm sure
 

huntsonora

Explorer
Man, I'm so lucky to be alive! I just moved my dually with 255/85-16s (the death trap size!) from one side of my driveway to the other!:wavey:

Damn bud! Be careful out there!

I should have a package to ship to you by the end of the week.
 
If you don't drive faster than 50 mph, and never need to make an emergency maneuver on the freeway, I think they are great choice. Have at it.
They are so great they're not even produced anymore.

What makes you think they're not made any more?
They are still listed in Michelin's online catalog:


http://www.michelintransport.com/ple/front/affich.jsp?codeRubrique=51&lang=FR
True, they are rated at "only" 68 mph. I have had no handling problems with 395/85R20 XZLs in my Unimog.
Charlie
 

bjm206

Adventurer
Be aware that XZLs wear out very fast when used on paved surfaces. They are soft and will leave marks on paved surfaces like tractor tires. Very nice tires.
 

Kaisen

Explorer
What makes you think they're not made any more?
They are still listed in Michelin's online catalog:


http://www.michelintransport.com/ple/front/affich.jsp?codeRubrique=51&lang=FR
True, they are rated at "only" 68 mph. I have had no handling problems with 395/85R20 XZLs in my Unimog.
Charlie
You're looking at the French site, and the info there is outdated

Look at Michelintruck.com which is Michelin of North America. No, they do not manufacture or offer a 255/100-16 or 9.00-16 for North America
http://www.michelintruck.com/michelintruck/tires-retreads/tireInfo.do?tread=XZL

395/85R20 XZL on a Unimog is a very, very different fitment than a 255/100-16 XZL on a SRW 1 ton pickup driven on American freeways
 

redneck44

Adventurer
Be aware that XZLs wear out very fast when used on paved surfaces. They are soft and will leave marks on paved surfaces like tractor tires. Very nice tires.

Mine have done 30k+ miles and are showing very little wear, they certainly don't leave marks on paved surfaces either, however they are of European origin, maybe they make a different compound tyre for the U.S.
 

Jr_Explorer

Explorer
395/85R20 XZL on a Unimog is a very, very different fitment than a 255/100-16 XZL on a SRW 1 ton pickup driven on American freeways

I was gona say it almost doesn't matter what speed rating the tire is since most Mogs really shouldn't even be driven on American freeways.
 

bjm206

Adventurer
Mine have done 30k+ miles and are showing very little wear, they certainly don't leave marks on paved surfaces either, however they are of European origin, maybe they make a different compound tyre for the U.S.

Must be different compounds as I have never seen more than 15K miles on them before needing replacement. XZL2s are supposed to have a longer life but only come in a limited size range for North America.
 

Larry

Bigassgas Explorer
Wow, I never even heard of that size before!? :eek: At first, I thought it was a joke. Looks like an interesting tire size, sounds like it is close to a 9.00X16?? How many inches tall are they?

I wish there are more tire options out there in the Q78 and 9.00 x 16 world, basically 34 to 36" tall by 10 to 11" wide. My dad ran 9.00x16 and Q78 x 16 on our 4x4 wrecker (single rear wheel wrecker) for many years and I learned to love the tall skinnys too. I run 315/75R16 all terrain's for long distance out of state trips but for local mountain trips you can't beat these Q78's. They keep the track width somewhat narrow for the narrow mountain trails, chew through snow like a snow blower and deform around rocks when aired down like silly putty. For being biased ply they really don't handle too badly on the highway either. 8,000lbs of truck and camper on top of them might help keep them at bay at highway speeds. Tire life is pretty sucktastic though, typical of Super Swampers. Again, I wish Super Swamper wasn't the only game in town for tall skinnys

1188088739_38dbf2f5aa_z.jpg

6224882717_dd0390a2e0_z.jpg

8190791807_1ce734b445_c.jpg

8191906902_46234883dc_c.jpg
 

Forum statistics

Threads
190,464
Messages
2,927,847
Members
234,008
Latest member
zhukoveli
Top