I'm not inferring you caused the wear, but I think it could be a possible issue, from under inflated tires? I went through an issue with Goodyear tires on my 94 2500 Dodge Ram because of serious cracks at the beads and they had to be replaced. I was told that they did that due to being under inflated and was lucky they didn't have a serious blowout. And he was right about the under inflated tires, because I ran them low in pressure to soften the ride.I'm happy that you all have had such good luck with Michelin tires. I was once 100% loyal to Michelin and ran them on every vehicle I owned. In 2014 I had a LTX MS 2 suffer a sidewall separation driving the truck at highway speeds. In all of my years of driving, I never experienced a flat happen in that manner. When I took it back to my tire dealer, they informed me of the following recalls on Michelin tires from 2013 and that the damage to the tire appeared to be similar to the problem they were having.
http://www.michelinman.com/US/en/help/safety-recalls/ltx.html
http://www.fr.michelin.ca/US/en/help/safety-recalls/latitude-tour.html
After several months of back and forth with Michelin, they denied my claim for recall replacement. According to them, other sizes of the LTX MS 2 were recalled for this problem but there was no way that the 265/17 that I was running could have similar issues.
I will not be doing business with Michelin anytime in the future.
I'm not inferring you caused the wear, but I think it could be a possible issue, from under inflated tires? I went through an issue with Goodyear tires on my 94 2500 Dodge Ram because of serious cracks at the beads and they had to be replaced. I was told that they did that due to being under inflated and was lucky they didn't have a serious blowout. And he was right about the under inflated tires, because I ran them low in pressure to soften the ride.
I don't think the Michelins come in that size. If you can live with the reduced weight rating then they are probably fine. These trucks eat tires so anything less than the harder compounds have problems lasting. If you only drive 5k per year by the time they are worn out they are due for replacement anyway.
Nitto had a recall on some of their Duras years ago for just those reasons.
If your talking about the Michelin Defender LT, it doesn't come in the OEM LT235/80R17 E, but does come in the LT245/75R17 E which Greg has successfully run on his DRW truck in a Firestone tire. They are load range E so they are equivalent to either the Michelin LTX M&S or the Nitto Durra Grappler.
One of my criteria for buying tire's also has the ply ratings vrs actual number of ply's. Lots of tire's with E load 10 ply tire rating running less than 10 ply's.
DRW's are a problem because you can run a lighter weight tire on the rear as there are 4 but you put them on the front and hurts them. 4 tires at 2800 lb ratings are adequate on the rear but if you rotate to the front they aren't.
Not entirely true.
i have had two sets of Dura Grapplers over the years. They were great tires and wore like iron. If I didn't require better off road capability I'd have bought a set for my 4th gen. instead of the EXO's I ended up with.
No, it is entirely true. Go back and read my post, in a single wheel application minimum 126-129 load index is preferred, you can squeak by with a 124 depending on the tire but that is pushing it. On an SRW anything lest than a 126 index is wasting the $$ to buy the tires, the front end on a dually doesn't magically change that.
The CTD overloads those single front tires empty and beats them to death loaded. Tread failures, sidewall failures, death wobble, etc, that is the end result when using to light of a tire.
You can put 305/80R22.5J tires on a Ram if you want, it still won't change the GAWRs. If you're even just occasionally having tire failure that catastrophic, a higher load rating won't necessarily change anything.
What is the weight rating on that tire? Not talking about changing or overloading the GAWR. Oh, yes it WILL make a NECCESSARY difference in whether the tire fails or lasts to its expected lifetime.
Your missing the point here, a 3100 lb weight rated tire is just barely adequate for EMPTY driving let alone loaded, some are not even adequate for that. The front tires take a beating from JUST the engine.
You have a point, but the front end can't have more than 6,000 on both tires. I imagine there are tires rated at 126-129 service rating but I haven't see them in the 235/80R17.
I must be lost on how the front tires are taking a beating on an unloaded truck. If you are upsizing and going to a tire without a 121, or higher load index, then you are in trouble.