BFG MT'S
i have the bfg mud terrains and the rocky trailshere seem to be chewing the lugs up pretty good, i know they are a "mud" tire but do you guys have any idea'son a tire for the rocks, from personal experience?i thought about the bfg krawlers, but starting at $284 a tire and they seem to only start in the 35 inch range, so i would have to lift it more.i dont do rock crawling but i got off road every day and the roads up in the hills are all rocky,and the tires seem like they went through a cheese grater, we do get a little mud here in the winter when it rains or snows, lol......... thanks, tires are pretty new i bought in august
Sounds like you may want an All-terrain tire. Mudders are awesome for the wet stuff, but they are usually a softer compound which would explain why they're getting so beat up. I have the BFG All-terrains on a 93 toyota I used to own and I loved them. I did a little of everything (dirt trails, mud, snow) but nothing to serious in either of those categories. Check the wear ratings on the tires as well. IIRC Kumho usually has the worst and BFG, Toyo, and Yoki all had really good numbers. Hope that helps!
I've seen Swampers on the rocks and not get cut up too bad like your normal street type mud tire. Most people out here that run them also cut the lugs to get a few more biting edges.
I have Interco Trxus MTs and they are really soft. I'd bet slightly softer than your BFGs.
My last tires were ProComp ATs and they took a beating in the rocks. Tons of cuts over the years and never had a problem. They don't get chunked up like the MTs.
I have Interco Trxus MTs and they are really soft. I'd bet slightly softer than your BFGs.
My last tires were ProComp ATs and they took a beating in the rocks. Tons of cuts over the years and never had a problem. They don't get chunked up like the MTs.
Describe the terrain and conditions a little more. BFG Muds are really good in rocks from what I've seen with friends that have them. The only damage i've seen is when we were climbing steep shale ledges, but everyone's tires took the same damage that day. We do krawl and are usually aired down under 10 psi though, so I can't say how they stand up to high speed rocks and street psi. I run ProComp Xterrains and they hold up very well across the board.
i live in vegas, probably the same terrain or thereabouts. i would look at something like the xterrains as mentioned above, or my personal choice would be the Dick Cepek FC-II's. i dont personally have them, but have read alot of reviews and will probably purchase them for my next set of tire. just my opinion though...



