BFG.......Take me away!

Overland Hadley

on a journey
I don't know, I have Treadwright mud tires and they were like $250 cheaper than the Wrangler MTR and I love them so far. I have about 8k miles on them and they still look good as new.

True, sometimes (but rarely) a product can be better and cost less.

Check back with us in mid winter 45,000 miles from now. ;)
 

keezer37

Explorer
I got a bit more than 40k out of mine. About what I expected considering what they cost. A spin out on ice urged me to move on. At 40k the sipping was long gone and I should have gotten new ones before winter.They were good tires in the snow while the sipping was still there.

One thing I will always use is Tire Racks Consumer Survey. At least here you have thousands of people reporting so you start to factor out all the particulars of peoples vehicles, where and how they drive. With hundreds of thousands even millions of miles reported, the truth tends to stick to the surface.

http://www.tirerack.com/tires/surveyresults/surveydisplay.jsp?type=ORAT
 

Overland Hadley

on a journey

GabAlmighty

Observer
I'm up to 155k km's on the original factory Dunlop Grantreks on my truck. One got a massive bulge in it a while ago but i still have 2 originals.

Atleast i'm told they're the originals...
 

nucktaco

Adventurer
All things considered I felt that the Nitto Terra Grapplers were the worst tire I have ever owned

agreed. i bought a set of Terra crapplers for my Tacoma and got rid of them after 1 year of use. they wore horribly, chunked apart on fsr's and had the worst traction Ive ever experienced in any sort of inclement weather. the minute it started raining/snowing i was all over the road. epic fail. im buying km2's next. :smiley_drive:
 

Applejack

Explorer
I got a bit more than 40k out of mine. About what I expected considering what they cost. A spin out on ice urged me to move on. At 40k the sipping was long gone and I should have gotten new ones before winter.They were good tires in the snow while the sipping was still there.

One thing I will always use is Tire Racks Consumer Survey. At least here you have thousands of people reporting so you start to factor out all the particulars of peoples vehicles, where and how they drive. With hundreds of thousands even millions of miles reported, the truth tends to stick to the surface.

http://www.tirerack.com/tires/surveyresults/surveydisplay.jsp?type=ORAT

I like it too, unfortunately they don't survey all brands and one of the ones they didn't was the Nitto's.
But I did notice that there were a lot of positive reviews of the BFG Rugged Trail. CANT BE TRUE. So I guess we have to start surveying the surveys and then maybe we'll get a more accurate assessment:chef:.
 

degraaf

New member
I'm a BFG guy. I was going to try Generals but they were out of stock nation wide when I needed tires. I replaced my BFG All Terrains with their Mud Terrains this time and couldn't be happier.
01-tacoma-dc-3.jpg
 

Applejack

Explorer
I ran the KM2's on my Taco and they are a very fine tire for about 80% of what I do and where I go, but 20% of my winter time trips are on steep twisty and ice covered roads and the KM2's probably didn't help cope as much in those situations as my traction and skid control did. Now I have no TC or SC and need something with more siping than a traditional mud tire gives.
But YES, they are a great tire I really like them.
 

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