JaSAn
Grumpy Old Man
Is it just me?
From reading here and talking with friends, it seems that some tires work better on different makes/models/suspension geometry than others.
I've driven Dodge most of my adult life: mostly 4X4, solid front axle, both front coil and leaf spring, rear leaf. Of the AT tires I've had in the last 15 years BFG handled worse than Cooper or Falken (only 10K miles) in snow, ice, mud. Coopers were quietest.
From reading here and talking with friends, it seems that some tires work better on different makes/models/suspension geometry than others.
I've driven Dodge most of my adult life: mostly 4X4, solid front axle, both front coil and leaf spring, rear leaf. Of the AT tires I've had in the last 15 years BFG handled worse than Cooper or Falken (only 10K miles) in snow, ice, mud. Coopers were quietest.