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BFG KO2/ Nitto Ridge/ Falken Wildpeak

Discussion in 'Wheels & Tires' started by YotaBro, Jan 13, 2021.

  1. Jan 13, 2021 at 4:57 PM
    #31
    MTRock

    MTRock 1889

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    RG’s have been problem free. Great in mud, deep snow, sand, rain, weakest is on ice covered roads but not bad. Almost zero road noise! And they don’t pick up and throw every rock. I’ve had Ko2’s and they are rock throwing sob’s! Looked at the Wildpeaks but they looked like they would be rock throwing sob’s as well? I had Yokohama MT’s which are great tires and throw zero rocks, but are horrible on ice, and loud as f@&k!
     
    YotaBro[OP] likes this.
  2. Jan 13, 2021 at 5:28 PM
    #32
    YotaBro

    YotaBro [OP] This forum will make me broke

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    Lots of shenanigans.
    Yeah, I had Nitto MT on my dodge. They were great in the mud but began to crack around 30k~ miles which put a sour taste in my mouth. But I never had the AT ones.
     
  3. Jan 13, 2021 at 5:34 PM
    #33
    MTRock

    MTRock 1889

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    My Nittos have seen -25 to 100f no cracks
     
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  4. Jan 13, 2021 at 6:45 PM
    #34
    Minarets

    Minarets New Member

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    I had nitto ridge grapplers on my Titan for 60k mikes. They look awesome. They rode well and quiet for 30k. Got kinda loud at 40k. Never off roaded with them. They were not as good as I had hoped in wet conditions.
    Decided to go Wildpeaks for the Tundra. Too early to tell so far. Great in rain when new.
     
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  5. Jan 13, 2021 at 7:17 PM
    #35
    Stumpjumper

    Stumpjumper New Member

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    Probably because of size. KO2s in size I looked at were Es
     
  6. Jan 13, 2021 at 7:32 PM
    #36
    I_Am_Thee_Walrus

    I_Am_Thee_Walrus New Member

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    Wildpeaks are the best tire I’ve had in snow or rain. Can’t be beat for the price and durability
     
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  7. Jan 13, 2021 at 7:53 PM
    #37
    BravoDeltaRomeo

    BravoDeltaRomeo Old Man Little Blue Finger

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    goo goo g'joob :thumbsup:
     
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  8. Jan 13, 2021 at 8:25 PM
    #38
    I_Am_Thee_Walrus

    I_Am_Thee_Walrus New Member

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    A man of fine taste, I like it.
     
  9. Jan 13, 2021 at 8:55 PM
    #39
    Dceclipse

    Dceclipse New Member

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    Right now i have 3/1 spacer lift with billstein shocks on 295/70/18
     
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  10. Jan 14, 2021 at 5:24 AM
    #40
    FlyingWolfe

    FlyingWolfe Wolfie

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    My Taco and Jeep tires came C or E ratings for the same sizes, had to select the E rated ones. I think it's just dependent on how beef of a ply you want on your tires.
    Could've/should've done the C rated for how tiny the vehicles were but wanted the 10-ply for the off-roading because with my luck I'd run the only sharp rock in the entire county over, fillet my tire open, and be out of cell service. Again. :rofl:
    BFG ratings.jpg
     
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  11. Jan 14, 2021 at 5:38 AM
    #41
    bmc02

    bmc02 New Member

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    Have had KO2s for last few years and have been a great tire. Good wear, no flats, excellent in the snow and good looking. Only complaint is as they wear they get a little loud, but any tire with aggressive traction tends to do that in my experience. I'm probably around 25k in, still lots of tread left.
     
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  12. Jan 14, 2021 at 5:39 AM
    #42
    Stumpjumper

    Stumpjumper New Member

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    Like I said size. When I check Discount Tire for the size I want they only offer Es.
     
  13. Jan 14, 2021 at 5:50 AM
    #43
    myt1

    myt1 New Member

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    I put 60K on 275/75 70R, E rated, KO2's. I rotated them every 5K, religiously, and I maintained 40 psi. They never let me down. Mainly I used them for every day driving, but I definitely took them on roads that were rocky and required 4WD. The strong sidewalls was an important feature I looked for when deciding which tire to get.

    That being said, I replaced them with the Wildpeaks with all of the same specs. I had recently retired and money was a factor.

    I have not been disappointed. I'm at 40K with no issues and it appears I will also get 60K out of these tires as well. I have only been rotating these tires every 10K, mainly just as an experiment to help me decide if 5K rotations are necessary.

    I would agree with some of the post above, the Wildpeaks are somewhat quieter and somewhat smoother, but this isn't really something that is hugely important to me, as long as they just aren't ridiculously noisy.

    As with the KO2's, I've been on rough rocky four wheel only roads and the tires were fine. Also, I really haven't done any snow with either tire.

    I'm a pretty conservative driver speed-wise, seldom going over 80mph, usually I'm in the 65-75 range when on freeways, and my mileage with both tires was the same: 15.2 over all, and 16 when on long trips with a lot of highway driving.
     
  14. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:16 AM
    #44
    YotaBro

    YotaBro [OP] This forum will make me broke

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    Lots of shenanigans.
    Sweet, thanks for all of the inputs folks! can anyone explain what ply means though?
     
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  15. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:22 AM
    #45
    bmc02

    bmc02 New Member

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    Plys are with regard to sidewall composition. More plys = stronger tire for hauling heavier loads. Also gives you more protection from flats but downside is a stiffer ride.
     
  16. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:34 AM
    #46
    Stumpjumper

    Stumpjumper New Member

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    Correct me if I am wrong but I think number of plys applies to the whole tire not just sidewalls.
     
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  17. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:42 AM
    #47
    FlyingWolfe

    FlyingWolfe Wolfie

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    Pictures are hard. :rofl: I stuck that in as an example.. same size, both ratings. You can get multiple ply ratings for certain sized tires with the BFGs, the 'stock' size for the 18" pops up a D rated KO2 on tire rack. If you go up to a 265 it offers E. If you size taller you can do C or E. For the sake of the towing and hauling I do, personally, I do E rated. My buddy runs the C rated is a mall-crawler that whines about stiff sidewalls and spends more time washing and waxing his Tundra than actually driving it.
    Irrelephant to OPs post but was just throwing it out there. I tow and offroad and opted for the beefy ones and sized up, one of my buddys runs the stock size, black wall BFG 'D' rated tires on his 2017 Tundra, the aforementioned runs C rated on his 2014, my husband has E rated on his 2003.
    It's your world, squirrel. The options are endless.. What a time to be alive! :bananadance:
     
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  18. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:45 AM
    #48
    YotaBro

    YotaBro [OP] This forum will make me broke

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    Lots of shenanigans.
    How many plys should I want in a tire?
     
  19. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:55 AM
    #49
    FlyingWolfe

    FlyingWolfe Wolfie

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  20. Jan 14, 2021 at 6:55 AM
    #50
    Stumpjumper

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    That ? I like do I want HT, AT, or MT. It depends on how you use your truck. If you tow heavy loads you want the E. You might also want the E for off reading in rocks and or thorns.
     
  21. Jan 14, 2021 at 7:00 AM
    #51
    FirstGenVol

    FirstGenVol Brake Czar

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    I've had my KO2's in mud, snow, ice, and rock. The only time I struggled a little was some nasty TN mud but even then, I was able to make it through without getting stuck. If you are going to be in mud a lot, a mud terrain would be better.

    I took my truck through some sand dunes and the tires did just fine. There was only 1 steep dune I couldn't make it up.

    I'm not sure why people suddenly hate on the K02's so much. I'm not saying they are the best all terrain one can buy but they certainly aren't a bad tire and they are made in the USA. Tires have become almost as polarizing as politics. :notsure:

    IMG_20201229_214242_245.jpg

    0905201224a.jpg
    0905201133_HDR.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jan 14, 2021
  22. Jan 14, 2021 at 7:00 AM
    #52
    BravoDeltaRomeo

    BravoDeltaRomeo Old Man Little Blue Finger

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    I got E because it sounds cool and tough....plus it was the only option in my size. ;)

    In my defense, I live in a gravel road area, our pavement roads are terrible and I tow a few times a year. It's my first truck and first serious tire buy ever, so figured I'd go all out :thumbsup:
     
    Last edited: Jan 14, 2021
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  23. Jan 14, 2021 at 7:13 AM
    #53
    bmc02

    bmc02 New Member

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    I believe you are correct. I think sidewall has more affect on tire load capability and the resulting ride compared to tread, but I'm guessing they carry the tire "layers" through the whole tire.
     
  24. Jan 14, 2021 at 7:22 AM
    #54
    bmc02

    bmc02 New Member

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    In my opinion - if you use your truck for truck things, like hauling, towing, off road use then you should have a load e tire. If not then a load c will save money and give a better ride.
     
  25. Jan 14, 2021 at 7:55 AM
    #55
    FirstGenVol

    FirstGenVol Brake Czar

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    I went with load C BFG's to save a little on gas. I don't do any towing. Do you know if I need to be more careful when airing down with a C range? Lowest I've gone is around 18psi.
     
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  26. Jan 14, 2021 at 8:18 AM
    #56
    Team4M

    Team4M New Member

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    You cant go wrong with any of the brands mentioned and I have friends that swear by all 3 (and a few Toyo open country fans too), i think it's all personal preference...
    My personal experience was that I ran KO2 in the past and loved them. When I bought my truck it had Nitto Ridge Grapplers and I really loved them. When I did my lift and upsized my tires I went with Nitto Ridge Grapplers and now really really love them. So far 10K miles and I like that they are quiet on my highway commute, sticky in the rain and do great in the Florida sand & mud the few times I've ventured off road. I've played with the tire pressure to and it's a wide range you can run to get the feel you want. I get a lot of complements on the looks and that's never happened before so I guess that a plus.
     
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  27. Jan 14, 2021 at 8:26 AM
    #57
    YotaBro

    YotaBro [OP] This forum will make me broke

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    Lots of shenanigans.
    Glad to hear that you had a good experience with them. Yeah, I don’t tow but I’m a weekend overlander so I don’t wanna go the MT route again. I do more highway miles than off road miles. I think it’ll come down to whatever is cheaper. I agree idk why people started to hate on BFG so much. I love the way that they look and always prefer buying American made. That said idk if Falkens are American made or not.
     
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  28. Jan 14, 2021 at 8:50 AM
    #58
    Funnyguy713

    Funnyguy713 I can't get Jiggy with this Sh!t

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    Had KO2 on my Tacoma, loved them, looked great, and quiet. Have Cooper STT Pros on my Tundra, they are pretty loud. I am going back to KO2 when I need new tires.
     
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  29. Jan 14, 2021 at 9:49 AM
    #59
    Dceclipse

    Dceclipse New Member

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    I got the E rating as well, per google- They are indeed different tires due to the load rating. The load C tires have softer sidewalls and provide a more comfortable ride both on road and off road. The E rated tires have stiffer sidewalls and are more suited for towing or loading the pickup bed with heavy loads.
     
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  30. Jan 14, 2021 at 10:08 AM
    #60
    BravoDeltaRomeo

    BravoDeltaRomeo Old Man Little Blue Finger

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    Where they are made is probably size specific too. My 275/70/18 are THAILAND. In another Falken thread, some were showing theirs were USA.

    Personally, I don't care where they are made. I'm in Canada. So long as my supplier and warranty are in CAN or USA, I'm good with that.
     
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