Miforester
Well-known member
I bought Nitto Ridge Grapplers for my Ram and really like them.
I have a Kumho dealer near me. I'll stop by and take a closer look. I like that they have a lot of siping. Thanks.I put Kumho Road Venture AT52 10 ply's on both my Nissan Frontier and my Ford F-150. Great traction in mud and snow, on rainy roads, no load road nose and they seem to be wearing well.
I will buy again.
After quite a bit of research, I decided to get a set of Nokian Outpost N AT tires on my Chevy Colorado. They seem to check most of my boxes. Supposed to be great on winter roads(3 peak rated), not too heavy(some XL AT tires weighed over 50 lbs per tire), reinforced sidewalls, 60,000 mile warranty(more than most other AT tires I was looking at) and made in TN. Local tire shop has 4 in stock, so I'll get them put on tomorrow.check out Nokian tires, made in Finland, been using them for about 4 years now. Great on ice and snow and pretty smooth for a 10 ply

I will. FWIW, I found them for $214 per tire...which I thought was pretty reasonable.Pls keep this updated. Im in the market fairly soon, possibly before heading out west. You may not have long term feedback but anything would be great.
I have about 1000 miles on them right now. MPG is similar to the Wildpeak's AT3W they replaced. I get between 21 and 24 on my truck. I haven't noticed much road noise on the highway. The Cooper's I used to buy were much louder. I got a couple days of driving on wet roads and they were really solid. I live off a gravel road and noticed they will pick up and hold some small rocks in the tread but they aren't pelting my truck and I'm not sure how you avoid that unless you go with a different tread...ie: more of a street tire or more of a mud tire. Regardless, it doesn't seem to be causing a problem....just something I noticed. When I get on some winter roads this season, I'll get to see how they do but so far I like them.Less us know how they do.
Maybe I missed it but curious why you didn’t go with the Falcon AT4w? They will be going on my tundra soon when I replace. Nice HD tire. I got the At3 on now. No complaints. Also a rugged HD tire. Actually getting some new trails on my wife’s outback this morning. I’m a big fan of wild peaks.Update on the Nokian Outpost N AT tires: I really like these tires. I have put several thousand miles on them since August. I just drove over 3,300 miles on a hunting trip in my Chevy Colorado this month and got over 22 miles per gallon on the trip, including highway, city, towns and trails. I drove on dry, wet, gravel and muddy roads and trails without any issues, slipping etc. The mud and gravel clear out pretty well. The tires are quiet....at least I don't notice them if that's important to you. I will be testing them on on snow and icy roads soon enough but right now, I would purchase these tires again without
Both are good tires. The KO3's weigh 51 lbs per tire in my tire size. A lot more weight than my truck was set up for. Didn't want to loose the fuel mileage on the highway either. I put Yokohama tires on my wife's Subaru. I wanted a different tire for my truckBf Goodrich,yocohamma,
I'm running more of a highway tire now, I have Cooper all terrain tires, I like them on the highway, and I haven't been real hardcore with them off-road. I'm getting to the age where I really don't want to get stuck!!Both are good tires. The KO3's weigh 51 lbs per tire in my tire size. A lot more weight than my truck was set up for. Didn't want to loose the fuel mileage on the highway either. I put Yokohama tires on my wife's Subaru. I wanted a different tire for my truck
I bird hunt, elk hunt, deer hunt and bear hunt and travel across the country to do it. I hunt by myself most of the time and prefer to go to remote or wilderness areas when I can. Tires are an important piece of equipment for me and others and can be the difference between getting stuck, stranded or getting home. My brother on the other hand hunts about 45 minutes from his house and doesn't drive off gravel roads. He buys whatever the local tire shop recommends and could care less what tires are on his Jeep. He doesn't care because just about anything will work for where and how he hunts. He can always call his wife, kids or AAA. Most of the time I can't and they wouldn't come even if I did. It's all relative to what you need.I’m a farmer, pull heavy shit on the road and thru stubble fields and across creeks. I can’t tell you what tires are on my truck. All I know is they’re pumped up, not currently making any noise and get me out of dew slicked grass and the very occasional spot of mud. It’s my only vehicle, farm work, hunting, and go to town. I engage 4wd maybe a dozen times a year. I can’t grasp 2 pages about tires?