Stock tire size question
#1
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I recently bought a 2000 5.9L Durango SLT Plus 4x4 with 164,xxx miles and I'm nearly done going through it, fixing a lot of stuff. It seems real nice. My question is what size tires? There are 31/10.5R15 on the stock wheels now, but the door sticker shows 235/75R15XL. Which one should I buy? What's the XL all about? Thanks.
#2
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I recently bought a 2000 5.9L Durango SLT Plus 4x4 with 164,xxx miles and I'm nearly done going through it, fixing a lot of stuff. It seems real nice. My question is what size tires? There are 31/10.5R15 on the stock wheels now, but the door sticker shows 235/75R15XL. Which one should I buy? What's the XL all about? Thanks.
Steve
#3
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Might check the build sheet, you can get it here with your VIN# https://fcacommunity.force.com/RAM/s/equipment-listing I know that my 2000 Durango with the 4.7L had 31x10.50r15's factory stock as an option. As for the "XL" it stood for Extra Load...kinda like a LT tire rating. Hope this helps...
Steve
Steve
#4
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Steve
#7
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#8
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A whole lot more common than you think. I have dealt with tires for 30 years, see it all the time, what door sticker says isn't what came on a vehicle. Kinda generic in nature though many say "MINIMUM tire size" in small print above the listed size.
It was common in the late 80s with the old square body trucks and conventional old Dodge vans for that sticker to say 195/75/15, when the thing actually came brand new with 215s to 235s.
My Wrangler was that way too. Window sticker even said it came with 215/75/15s and door jamb sticker said 205s. I ran 235s Most of the time, though did have 31x10.50s on there for 1 set. Which was the biggest possible without a lift.
It was common in the late 80s with the old square body trucks and conventional old Dodge vans for that sticker to say 195/75/15, when the thing actually came brand new with 215s to 235s.
My Wrangler was that way too. Window sticker even said it came with 215/75/15s and door jamb sticker said 205s. I ran 235s Most of the time, though did have 31x10.50s on there for 1 set. Which was the biggest possible without a lift.
#9
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Hi dodgemahal, I just purchased one like yours, 1998 SLT plus, 4x4, 5.9L, White with gray interior in really great shape; mine has 17" wheels with 265/70/17 tires and speedo has been calibrated for the bigger wheels. It really runs strong; has a power steering hose small leak, and a few small drips from oil pan, so have to figure out if its pan gasket or rear main or valve cover gaskets or combination of all.
#10
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calibration not needed for the size of the WHEELS...… but overall tire height. You can buy 15s,16s and 17s for the respective wheel size that are all exactly the same overall height which is what matters for speedo calibration. If you want 22s you can find some kind of thin sidewall rubber band tires that will work fine with the speedo calibration as is.... NOT that I would suggest doing so, unless you want to completely ruin the appearance of your ride