I have finally stopped procrastinating and bit the bullet and ordered my new tyres to go on my Mach 6 rims (8" wide). I looked seriously at Ron's Simex's but decided against them as I think they are a bit big for my particular engine to pull and am a little concerned about the actual amount of rubber on the road when on bitumen. I will rein supreme offroad though.
I ended up ordering 315/75R16 LT BFG MT KM2s and get them on Wed or Thurs. They run about 880mm in diameter which is about the same as the original 9.00x16s (so I do not need to get a spare saving a few $$$) and a little bigger than my current MRFs.
Apparently (an I don't know) they are pretty good offroad and reasonably good onroad and apparently are long lived for a MT - and though not relevant to a 101 are reasonably quiet.
As Ron has done I will let you know how they go.
Cheers
Garry
Last edited by 101RRS; 3rd January 2017 at 06:07 PM.
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
Series Landy Rescue
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'51 80", Discovery 2, Defender 130, 101 FC + 20 other Land Rover vehicles
The quotes I was given was $430, $440 and $460 in Sydney and in the backwater that is Canberra prices ranged from $459 to $550.
You have a 101 so realise what the cost of fuel is - 540km round trip to Sydney will cost around around $150 (gas a bit cheaper) in the 101 so taking this into account I went the cheapest local option - Jax.
More than what I was expecting to pay for tyres but given all the good reviews is Ok. Mickey Thompson MTZs are similar and about $20-$30 cheaper. Maxxis Bighorns are a tad smaller and about $60 cheaper but do not have the same sort of positive reviews.
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
Make sure you get pics up once done. Its interesting seeing the "fatter" tyres on the 101. They almost make the tyre look smaller, even though the rolling diameter is the same.
Getting some new tyres fitted to the girlfriends Suzuki at our normal tyre place and I asked if they could source the Michelin XZL's and got quoted $775 just for the tyre![]()
Picked up the new BFGs tyres today and had them put on my Mach 6 rims - as usual the tyre fitter managed to scratch the rims when on the balancing machine. The bit that tightens the wheel to the machine must have tightened up on the spokes rather than the hub - but of touch up paint and all is OK. I went white lettering in to save being flamed on here.
Here is a pic of one of the new wheels and tyres next to one of my worn MRFs. Sorry about the quality, my camera has an issue so had to use the phone.
While the new tyres look at lot bigger in fact they are 850mm in diameter (supposed to be 878mm) vs one of the half worn MRFs at 840mm - the one in the pic is only about 830mm).
The MRFs measured 7.5 inches across the thread while the BFGs are 9 inches.
Fitted them on.
First issue was that the wheel steps would not fit because of the spokes so on the drivers side I also used the special nuts from the passenger side to move the step further out and all worked OK. I will have to buy 6 more of the special extended nuts to put the passenger side on.
When putting the wheels on I noticed that there was more room around the steering rods etc so I measured the distance between the old wheel rim and the springs and then the same with the new wheel - the offset is much further out - even discounting the extra 1.5" wider rim. The bottom line is the track is now a bit wider - so some sort of flares will be needed on the rears (Bunnings for garden edging) and maybe a bit wider in the front.
So the tyres are only a couple of mm higher than standard 9.00x16 tyres but about 1.5" wider but the offset is also greater.
Driving - it really felt similar to the old MRFs - a little easier to steer but I have all new tyres are easy to steer until they bed in. In suburban streets it turns into corners a lot more quickly bit otherwise drives well - bounces around a bit on broken surfaces but the MRFs do also.
315/75R16 tyres will generally be close to the diameter of 9.00 x16 and I found Mickey Thomson MTZ, Toyo MTs very similar in performance and cost - Maxxiz Bighorns were a little cheaper and slightly smaller but did not seem to rate as well. I went the BFGs because they seemed to rate well offorad as well as onroad often getting 65,000km out off them. I guess we shall see.
I will keep the best two MRFs (half worn) as spares and keep the rest for "emergency" use.
Edit - the tread depth on new BFG MT KM2s is 15mm.
Cheers
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
More interested on the 101 in that ad - looks like a Radio Body
My tyres do stick out about as much as in the ad - Ron do yours stick out as much?? Is a combination of wider wheels and increased offset - drives OK. Ron is the offset any different on your widened wheels??
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
My wheels are standard 101 centres welded onto a 8 inch rim with the internal offset the same as standard and the extra 1.5 inches to the outside of the rim.
Therefore my internal clearence is the same as before.
My tyres are 11 inches wide overall.
Most likely my tyre/wheel set up wouldnt stick out any further than yours.
I would have the advantage of less scrub steer as the tyre centre/kingpin angle would be little changed from standard including taking in acount of the slight larger diameter of the tyre.
I measured the tread depth as beening 18 mm.
I did another payment today on another Simex and I asked about the tyres you got..........the BFGs
They said good tyre and should get about 50 to 60 k life and a retail price of about 500 dollars.
I then asked about the simex.......much heavier duty tyre with unreal off road performance with no comment about tyre life.
horses for courses.
My front tyres do not stick out beyond the standard front rubber army flares .
The back tyre stuck out slightly.....25mm?? from the body work and why I fitted the extra rubber flares at the rear.
If going by the Flicka pics above mine stick out alot less.
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