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My coopers are wearing like crap. I'm just glad the price was right. I have heard the same thing from more than one person though that Cooper changed their compound and hope my next set wears better. I got AT's thinking they would last longer. Nope. Won't make 25,000 guaranteed. The completely suck in the mud too. SST's here I come...........
My coopers are wearing like crap. I'm just glad the price was right. I have heard the same thing from more than one person though that Cooper changed their compound and hope my next set wears better. I got AT's thinking they would last longer. Nope. Won't make 25,000 guaranteed. The completely suck in the mud too. SST's here I come...........
I think you would have better luck with the bridgestone/Toyo line.
Just as I suspected, The 37" SST is only D-rated with a load rating of 3525lbs. It measured at 36.9" tall with a 17x9 wheel.
The Toyo is slightly taller at 37.1, and has the E-rating with a 4300lb rating.
Almost 800lbs per tires is a huge difference.
Price seems to be around the same too. 37" SSTs run around $280/tire. I did see one place for around $246/tire though.
IMHO, I think you can't go wrong with either tire unless you tow on a regular basis. I recently slapped a 12,000lb trailer on the *** end of my excursion and pulled it from SoCal to Colorado when we moved. It was everything in a 4bdrm house I could fit into a 24ft enclosed. The Toyos barely squated at 65psi.
Last edited by Jeepincj7; Jul 12, 2007 at 11:17 AM.
I think toyo MTs have a better ply rating as well. My good buddy just got done running some cooper stts and got about 20k out of them, plus pieces of the tread were tearing off. And theres no way the rubber is harder, unless they recently changed that like said.
Yea, the Toyo and STT's are almost exactly the same height in the 37's but the Toyos are wider. I would have had to do some trimming and the Toyos would have stuck out past the fender flares which I hate.
Plus the STT's just look way cooler.
And as an added bonus, Cooper is an American company while Toyo is Japanese.
Putting Jap tires on a Ford truck just don't feel right somehow.
Thats okay... none of them are as good as the Wrangler MT/R. Thought I'd stir the pot a little more. Its technically just my opinion, but thats the tire I run on a competition mud truck.
I like the looks of the Goodyear MT/Rs, Ive just heard they wear fast.
same here. a buddy of mine had them on a (much lighter than full size) jeep wrangler...went back to BFG muds and is happy again.
i can't complain one bit about my MTZ's... 20k miles and awesome wear... nice and flat, no tears, and great manners still. i had the BFG muds on my last truck and they were great; wear-wise, about the same as the MTZ's, but the mickey's are much better in the rain and on ice/slippery snow.
i considered the STT's... a great looking tire (and not too bad manners-wise from what i've heard locally). "the best" looking tire? i'm not sure about that... but the price is right.
Thats okay... none of them are as good as the Wrangler MT/R. Thought I'd stir the pot a little more. Its technically just my opinion, but thats the tire I run on a competition mud truck.
MTR is a good tire also. Too bad the national backorder is so damn long and $400 for a 37" tire in a 17" wheel ain't cutting it either.
I've run several sets on my comp crawler rigs throughout the years. Not the best tire in mud though compared to a swamper or some others.
I switched to Toyo a couple years ago. They hook up better in the rocks than the MTR. And last year's Baja 1000 winner ran them on his truck(Robby Gordon).
Having run Irok Swampers(twice), Toyo M/Ts(twice), BFG M/Ts(never again), and three sets of MTRs. The Toyo is still my pic for the hardcore guy, or the guy who streets his rig.