Pskhaat
2005 Expedition Trophy Champion
see if the Primacy's are any good off the pavement
I was putting forth only the LTX M/S. Open to hearing results but those appear to be very street spec'd. (I get the irony of saying that in this thread).
see if the Primacy's are any good off the pavement
A 285/75R16 will net you a 32.8x11” tire.if they made them in a 33x10.50

Michelins are the worst tire I've run so far but to be fair that was prior
the big fat MT Nittos belt out a siren call for any testosterone possibly left
get the LTX MS in the tallest, slimmest and lightest C rated size that will fit my taco, without lifting it.
Am I thinking correctly?
Bill
Thanks for the advice pskhaat!... I lean towards pizza cutters. I will investigate lifts with longer spring travels...and sigh..already I’m bumping my planned payload up to 1200 lbs... I’ll start another post after researching lifts with longer travel and real world payload.I'm a BFG or Firestone guy and I do have a set of MTs, but they sit 90% unused in the garage.
I am a big fan of a lift. Primarily simply for the larger travel springs and load capacity. The LTX are not made in many tall sizes. But if I had a Taco I'd run 235/85 LTX without hesitation despite their E rating.
On the money, many advantages to pizza cutters. These are the tallest, skinniest I have found. Yokohama 7.50R16s. 31" tall.Great post...confirms what I experienced at dicey construction sites littered with surface mud and snow/ice In MN with a loaded down 2X truck. The tires simply amazed me. And this was after experiencing them on a 4X Burb which got my attention trekking across drifted lakes for ice fishing, but I had thought the 4X was the secret sauce... I now know different.
True, ya can’t run em like a fool... air down... feel them bite. Sorta like the ole wood shop teacher catching you leaning into that power sander, him grabbing it and letting it float with two fingers, explaining how ya gotta feel the paper cut the wood. I digress... It’s just that I’ve seen so many people stuck in snow, just given’er more gas when she’s been spinning long ago with tires now nice’n hot and making ice... then jumping out shouting explicit names at said tires.
Now I recently bought a 3rd gen Taco TRD OR long bed and want to outfit it for overlanding in Northern MN. Don’t plan on diving into the gumbo and not attempting any trail tougher than a 7 outa 10, where 10 is the toughest. Payload strictly to be no more than 1,000 pounds, including passengers. Have winch will travel.
Even at the tender age of 59 the big fat MT Nittos belt out a siren call for any testosterone possibly left in me. However, my experiences and brain tell me to get the LTX MS in the tallest, slimmest and lightest C rated size that will fit my taco, without lifting it.
Am I thinking correctly?
Bill

Any updates on the LTX's? How are they handling the off roading? Any sidewall issues?
Yeah I hear ya. Im trying to use it as an excuse to get outdoors and away from people as much as possible and not be stuck in the house because I get stir crazy!!Touring has been limited in 2020. Because...well, you know
But they carried us on most mountain tracks with relative ease this summer. Only place where I really did wish I had my KM3s was several trips up/down Radical Hill ( https://www.alltrails.com/explore/trail/us/colorado/radical-hill-ohv-trail ), which aired down to 12psi they did actually just fine, could have used some side lugs, but these kinds of roads are exception cases. As to sidewalls, I have a bent lip on my steel wheel from sliding the sidewall down a sharp rock ledge; the steel bent, yet only a coloration scar on the tire.
Admittedly I did opt for running my KM3s on our Circumtour Canyonlands expedition in October. Else the LTXen are back on for the winter. ?