Thanks for the heads up as I'd never heard of this company. I looked through their website.Nice looking camper. They are advertising using this tire on the GVWR 32k lbs Juggernaut:
"46” Goodyear MV/T, 14-Ply, 81MPH-Rated Tires, Load-Range G Super Singles"
Seems adequate though I wonder why they don't spec the L-rated version. Goodyear offers MV/T 395/85r20 in both L (20-ply) and a G (14-ply) versions, only differences I see in the specs are the former is 10lbs heavier and max load is 12,300lbs vs 10,200lbs. They are rated both rated to 68mph on highway single or dually. I don't doubt their claims but wonder how that equates to 81mph, maybe I am looking at old (2020) specs. Looks like a good concept, wonder how big that market is / is going to be and always, price. I do like how they seem to be smart enough not to rely on a rear axle and tires that are near/over max weight right from the factory. If you've ever seen an Acela/visited their factory, you know you are looking at a true offroad truck capable of carrying a lot of weight.
SIDEBAR: when shopping for an expedition truck, of the hundred+ things to scrutinize before buying, check the axle & tire ratings and then get proof / go weigh the front and rear axles on a CAT scale, with a realistic loadout (full fuel, water, etc.) if possible or at least estimate what you will be adding to the overall weight of the truck. Typically, most of that weight is likely to be adding more to the rear axle load than the front. Look at the scale results, look closely at the tire speed, load and inflation/PSI specs. Try to have an idea how much additional weight you will be loading onto the vehicle for the trips you take, then maybe add some to make it safe. Are you going to be towing? Factor that in as well. Make sure you like what you see e.g. if the scale says your rear axle load is 14,000lbs and you have a rear axle rated to 16,000lbs but tires rated to only 6000lbs (at max PSI) each, you might want to think about options for a different tire...or a different rig because if they couldn't get the tires right after all of the advertised R&D and real world testing, other things could be sub-par. Also realize that the max speed/load rating, the numbers we all pay the most attention to, generally coincide with max PSI. If you lower the PSI, logically you should expect lowered speed and load capacity. Driving slowly through dirt is one thing and where most offroad tires shine performance-wise across a spectrum of PSI. Going 70mph+ on a hot summer highway is where I'd really want to ensure my tires were at the right PSI. Most well built things are over-engineered but a tire/axle/wheel bearing/etc. failure can be serious. To each his own, and I'm always interested to hear from real engineers and the more experienced folks out there, but I'm looking for an axle and tire that is rated to 10-20% more weight than I anticipate loading on it.
No pass-through is mentioned, maybe I missed it. This seems to be tough to do on the Acela/LMTV but is essential for me. I'm been mpressed by the Bliss boxes and some of the GXV and Euro rigs (Unicat, etc.) but this Juggernaut might be worth a look.