They are great until about mid tread and they get noisy. Really noisy, they are about the perfect tire for the first half of their life for sure,
Maybe. Could be 6, 8, 10, 12,… But it does give a clue it’s got a higher ply rating than. ”P” tire. The manufacturers web sites will often give you a ply rating estimate for a metric sized LT tire, load range C is a 6 ply rating, D is 8, E is 10, etc. My current tire is a LT275/70r18. It has a load rating of 125 iirc that also equates to a 10 ply tread, 3 ply sidewall, E rated tire. Traditional USA naming vs Metric, it gets all mixed up.Isn't "LT" the secret code for 10x3 ply?
I get nervous driving non-LT tires on rocky forest roads.
The chipping makes them unreliable, I get about 10,000 miles out of M55's on logging roads. They do great on pavement but the chipping makes them flat prone around 50% tread life.M55 are probably the most widely used forest service road tire out there. There are people out there that don’t like them because they are too hard or too stiff but if you want the most reliable tire for forest service roads the M55 is the tire.
That’s crazy that you only get that many miles. My buddy has them on his service rig and has a ton more miles than that and they still look good. He also runs them on his Tacoma and they have been on there for 2-3 years and are definitely better than 50%. They are probably the number one tire for most tire shops that are used as a tire for fleet vehicles for forestry.The chipping makes them unreliable, I get about 10,000 miles out of M55's on logging roads. They do great on pavement but the chipping makes them flat prone around 50% tread life.
This tire probably only has 5,000 miles on it
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