m700 Duravis
I went with BRIDGESTONE commercial traction m700
Duravis this time around. First two tire sets (Michelin) lasted almost a quarter-million.
https://www.bridgestonetire.com/tire/duravis-m700-hd/
I don’t expect tire life to be that high as those (A/S & M/S LTX), but starting then keeping the trailer underway on low-traction surfaces now more of a priority. Rear axle stays above 4,500-lbs in non-hitched use, so:
A) Want to leverage that weight to best effect.
B). Will trade some high speed competence & very longest tire life + MPG for low-speed ability in low-traction conditions.
C).
Preservation of Long Life/MPG potential is via closest match of tread width & rim width (with weight-scale derived pressures to maintain) and a basic “rib” tread configuration with closed shoulders.
— Other Duravis users report long life, and the 726-series on big trucks with somewhat similar tread design was a godsend in the Texas oilfield (life & traction).
Fingers crossed.
With new tires came a new set of 4600 Bilsteins +
CounterAct balancing compound.
Seen this way it was close to $500/tire after all expenses tallied.
Find your tire expense per mile. My last set given same price was .022-CPM. (This is a significant big truck expense metric as its placed directly behind fuel cost).
A note for research: Big truck tire choices at each position are flat bewildering there are so many. A long list of questions to answer.
For pickups and similar it starts with expected daily loads: Occasional versus near-constant heavy load and/or towing.
Greatest satisfaction (money spent) will be to best match.
In Michelin it’s LTX Defender for the RV’er otherwise a daily driver versus for the contractor it’ll be the Agilis (is an example of how the manufacturer makes recommendations.)
1). Quality pays for itself, first.
2).
Design is the piece to match what’s reality, not wishfulness, for a given level of quality.
3). Truck lifetime operating expense is seriously affected by good/bad tire choice.
Higher fuel consumption past what’s necessary shortens trucks’ economical lifespan.
Also,
I see an amazing number of
bad highway tire choices on pickups passing me on the Interstate at 80-MPH. (Highest risk during greatest number of miles).
— All tires are a compromise versus conditions expected. If 3% of miles have priority (off-pavement), then the tires
won’t be high speed wunderkinds.
Slow the F down.
Take your time in research. (Pays in cash money).
Expense — and Risk — both have real weight.
.