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Thread: How mismatched can tyres be? Can we put a figure on it?

  1. #11
    Ecopix Guest

    Overthinker

    Well, I say again, thank you all so much for your helpful replies. Now I understand. Loved Strangy's diagnosis - hey, I'm a professional photographer - I'm paid to overthink everything! (I thought I already posted this thank-you note, but I can't see it. Maybe I pressed the wrong button. Apologies if it's duplicated.)


    I've learned from various manufacturer's spec sheets that the difference in tyre rolling circumference is due to tread pattern type - MTs are bigger than ATs. Within the tread type, they're fairly uniform across manufacturers for the same placarded size, but there's maybe 13mm difference in diametre between tread types (mud terrain and all-terrain).


    My spares were both dodgy so I decided to get a couple of newies anyway. So I bought two AT's for the front and have the MTs as spares. Logic was that I already have two new MTs sitting in the container at home, so now I have a set of each. And if it rains on the way home, I can swap the spares over on one axle. I'll try to find two more 130 rims in due course.


    Now when I do my test (mark the bottom dead centre of each tyre and drive 5 revolutions forward on flat ground) the marks all end up more or less in the same place. I don't know the answer to DiscoMick's question, but I tried the test on a very slight side slope, and the upper side two tyres showed about 50mm less travel than the lower side two. I thought that strange. Repeated the exercise on perfectly level ground and no such effect.


    I was wrong about Alice Springs tyre prices. Turns out it was just one shop price-gouging. Most are only $25-35 dearer than coastal, which is fair enough considering freight. The mob I bought from conformed to their national catalogue price, so little pain there.


    I bought GT Radial Adventuro AT2, which looked like an ordinary strong, relatively hard bush tyre. I'm more concerned about strength than tyre life, because I rarely manage to wear out a tyre anyway. A sharp stick or stone eventually gets 'em.

    Many thanks,
    Wayne
    PS. The 13mm lower diametre of AT's might be a 6.5mm downer. I already drag my big Salisbury diff over termite mounds when following Tojo's. But I'm probably overthinking again!

  2. #12
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    I was running 4 Bridgestone Dueler M/T 674's on my 300Tdi 130, but the two rear failed on the Plenty Hwy, midsummer and loaded up, as did one spare,
    How old and how much wear were on your Duelers when you started your trip?
    To blow 3x tyres in one trip suggests to me that there was a problem with either the tyres or the tyre pressures to have that many fail on you.
    Maybe fit a good set of AT's instead of MT's as the AT's will give you better milage and handle the weight better.
    Whatever you get fitted make sure that your tyre pressures match the terrain you are driving on as well
    You only get one shot at life, Aim well

    2004 D2 "S" V8 auto, with a few Mods gone
    2007 79 Series Landcruiser V8 Ute, With a few Mods.
    4.6m Quintrex boat
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  3. #13
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    I was running 4 Bridgestone Dueler M/T 674's on my 300Tdi 130, but the two rear failed on the Plenty Hwy, midsummer and loaded up, as did one spare ..............

    Interesting looking at Bridgestones specs on these tyres. They don't show a 235/85 R16 but do show a 245/70R16LT which has a miserable load rating of only 113 or 1150 KG.

    If these were the tyres you were running then it's no wonder they failed, severely under speced for anything but a shopping trolley.


    Deano
    66 SIIA SWB .......73 SIII LWB diesel wgn
    86 RR 'classic'......99 Range Rover P38a
    94 Defender 110..95 Defender 130 Ute
    96 D1 300TDi.......99 D2 TD5 (current)
    04 D2a Td5..........02 Disco 2 V8

  4. #14
    Ecopix Guest
    Hi,
    They were 235/85R16, in Bridgestone Dueler M/T 674's, 10 ply 120/116Q, about 60%. Failures were mostly my fault. Otherwise, there's no quick answer. I bought 4 new a coupe of years ago after getting stuck on ordinary tyres, and another four almost unused 2nd hand last year. I've lost track of which ones were on the vehicle when I had trouble last summer, but it was my fault for running too high a pressure in the heat.


    I've done a lot of work with the M/Ts on, and their traction on muddy roads is unbelievable. I've never been caught since running them, and as I usually travel solo, that's important to me. I was the last vehicle in line once on a mad dash out of the mallee after two inches of rain overnight. I recall thinking it wasn't a time for playing around, because all the tyre grooves in the road ahead of me were all over the road and into the table drains. But the old Landie just drove a straight line down the middle of the road, as if it was dry. When I caught up with the others in Wentworth, they assured me they hadn't been playing!


    I don't think its editorial policy here to criticise products, and I honestly don't know if I have any grounds anyway. Of the eight, one's unused, and two are half worn out but okay (now spares). One's almost worn out, and four have come apart.


    The first one that failed was probably my fault. I was lost in traffic in Brissie, and did too quick a u-turn between cars to get back on the right road. I heard a squeal from the back of the vehicle when the rear wheels hit the bitumen from the shoulder (yes, Defenders can squeal their tyres if you push them hard enough!) and I immediately knew I'd probably ruined a tyre. Sure enough, wire poked through the centre all around the tread.


    Another one of the new tyres gave way a year ago in western Queensland. Again, it was after a small (only momentary) wheelspin on bitumen under load. I took it to a Bridgestone dealer, but as it was half worn out, they said I'd gotten my money's worth out of it.


    The two that failed on the Plenty were also partially worn (remember that mud tyres wear out quickly). They were probably my fault for putting too much air in them in 44 degree heat. The local station lad who helped me said they run their tyres at 24psi in summer, no matter how much load they have on. I was on 45psi in the rear all loaded up, with the slide-on camper, and he said no wonder they blew.


    The second spare that failed was just an old tubed tyre that probably went flat without me knowing, as tubes do. So, yes, AT's now for the long runs, and lower pressures in mid-summer. And don't squeal the tyres in a 3.5 ton constant four-wheel-drive with luggy tyres! Something's gotta give!

  5. #15
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    Just to put your mind at ease , AFAIR The old RRCs with LT95s had it written somewhere on a placard that the maximum difference in tyre size was 10% , which is a helluver lot more than you are looking at.
    And the LT95 centre diff was not any more robust than the LT230 .
    Regards Philip A

  6. #16
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    Thanks Wayne for the detailed response. It seems that Bridgestone don't make this tyre any more which is a bit strange as you'd reckon a 235/85R16 (7.50R16 replacement) would be one of their best sellers.

    Bridgestone Dueler M/T D674 – Bridgestone Tyres

    Perhaps there's a good reason why they don't.

    I wouldn't beat yourself up too much about running the tyres at higher than 'normal' pressures under load, that's what your supposed to do.


    The first one that failed was probably my fault. I was lost in traffic in Brissie, and did too quick a u-turn between cars to get back on the right road. I heard a squeal from the back of the vehicle when the rear wheels hit the bitumen from the shoulder (yes, Defenders can squeal their tyres if you push them hard enough!) and I immediately knew I'd probably ruined a tyre. Sure enough, wire poked through the centre all around the tread.


    Another one of the new tyres gave way a year ago in western Queensland. Again, it was after a small (only momentary) wheelspin on bitumen under load. I took it to a Bridgestone dealer, but as it was half worn out, they said I'd gotten my money's worth out of it.


    The two that failed on the Plenty were also partially worn (remember that mud tyres wear out quickly). They were probably my fault for putting too much air in them in 44 degree heat. The local station lad who helped me said they run their tyres at 24psi in summer, no matter how much load they have on. I was on 45psi in the rear all loaded up, with the slide-on camper, and he said no wonder they blew.

    An interesting 'saga' here which doesn't really say much about the quality of these tyres. I don't know if I agree with the 'station lad' re tyre pressures under load but if traveling at slow speed on loose sand/gravel/dirt probably about right. Moderately loaded with with high ambient temp the tyre flex would generate enough heat so that they were probably running at 35 psi anyway.

    I have done a fair bit of outback traveling in various vehicles over the years and don't reckon MT's are the answer. If the road/track is 'bad enough' that you need MT's to get through you shouldn't be driving on it in the first place is my view, harsh but realistic IMO. AT's are much better in all outback scenarios with the exception of 'wet' and then so much damage is done to the road/track if driven on then it's, again IMO irresponsible to do so unless in an emergency situation.

    Good traveling and I hope we meet 'some where down the track' and I can pick your brain regarding my photographic short falls

    Deano
    66 SIIA SWB .......73 SIII LWB diesel wgn
    86 RR 'classic'......99 Range Rover P38a
    94 Defender 110..95 Defender 130 Ute
    96 D1 300TDi.......99 D2 TD5 (current)
    04 D2a Td5..........02 Disco 2 V8

  7. #17
    Ecopix Guest
    Many thanks Deano, Philip and everyone. Wiser now and even older.

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