I'll stop by the tire shop and see If they still have those Toyo's, I thought they were an M555? but I could be wrong. Also on Tire prices I'm in Canada and tires and Wheels are way more expensive!! I was going to phone Buckstop and see what a set of wheels and flares cost. Also we have to add almost 30% for exchange!
Curious about what options in the light truck catagory are available?
I would need to run singles for the ability to air down on bad washboard roads in Baja so singles are a must.
The highest load rating I have seen in a light duty single tire is 4000 lbs.
If my camper weighed in at 5000 lbs I think I would be over the weight rating of any light duty tire.
/Sorry for the Hijack.....
These are the tires. Toyo 655. I see Toyo Canada shows them now.I'm curious about those new toyos you saw. I ran the M608z 265/70r19.5 on my truck for almost 100k miles(I re-grooved them once). They wore like iron, but I was not thrilled with their mud/snow performance. I live in rural Western Oregon where mud is a constant 6-7 months a year and I travel into the snowy regions for weeks on end.
-Chris
Looking at the price of MRAP, adapters and bolt kits I could get a set of 1st attack or Buckstop. I'm going to call a local fire apparatus builder that makes a super single bush truck and see what they use for wheels and price.I'm curious about those new toyos you saw. I ran the M608z 265/70r19.5 on my truck for almost 100k miles(I re-grooved them once). They wore like iron, but I was not thrilled with their mud/snow performance. I live in rural Western Oregon where mud is a constant 6-7 months a year and I travel into the snowy regions for weeks on end.
-Chris
I’d stay away from the mrap wheels. The offset is just too hard to work out I think. If you do go that route you can get much better pricing on the MPT’s. I paid $385 a piece for mine brand new shipped of eBay. Seller was a tire shop on east coast with some sort of deal on them. Shipped to the local terminal in pdx for $250 I think.
I’m very pleased with my setup for the weight of truck that I have. But the Stryker wheels were key for me liking this set up. I think my front to rear track is within an inch.
If you can keep your rig lighter by 2000 lbs or so I think there are more options in light truck category. I was tempted by the m608’s as well but they were pretty pricey and I really wanted the overdrive of bigger meats. As far as suspension goes...I think reality is either air suspension with truck tires or flotation Tires and stock springs will make the trucks ride fine when loaded. My truck spends a lot of time unloaded so I like having both...though I wished I had stiffer rear springs when loaded.
Those look very interesting!! Look at the siping on them. Yum.These are the tires. Toyo 655. I see Toyo Canada shows them now.I'm curious about those new toyos you saw. I ran the M608z 265/70r19.5 on my truck for almost 100k miles(I re-grooved them once). They wore like iron, but I was not thrilled with their mud/snow performance. I live in rural Western Oregon where mud is a constant 6-7 months a year and I travel into the snowy regions for weeks on end.
-Chris
https://www.toyotires.ca/tires/m655-mixed-service-all-position-tire
The Toyo isn't available in the US.... I tried.... Because it does look like a damn good winter tire.Thats a nice looking tire, a proper all weather tire,
They may be available in the states, as not all tire manufactures put all their range on their catalogues.
Might be worth shooting an email