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Thread: Report on General Grabbers

  1. #1
    Timj is offline Wizard Silver Subscriber
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    Report on General Grabbers

    Well when I fitted a set of 255/60/18 General Grabbers a few weeks ago I said I would report what I thought of them after a while. I have to say that right now I am not impressed. Part of the reason that I bought them was that I believed they had stronger case construction than the standard Goodyear Wranglers and therefore stronger sidewall. Unfortunately I found out the hard way in Sundown National Park yesterday that they are actually pretty soft in the sidewall and if you air them down the sidewalls are very exposed due to the way they bag out and they will get cut on rocks. I had two tyres punctured through the sidewall and one rim damaged quite badly so all in all an expensive weekend. The tread pattern is definitely better than the standard tyre and did not chip or show any signs of damage but depending on the terrain that may not be enough.

    Here is a photo of the damaged rim -

    This is the inside of the rim and it was on the front right.

    Here is a photo of the damage to the outside of the same tyre with our attempt to plug it to make the tyre useable if I damaged another. It would not hold air though.



    And some more damage on the outside of the same tyre that did not get through.



    This is the one that got through on the first puncture which was on the back right. This one we patched to again get a tyre that could be used in an emergency if I damaged another but the patch would be very borderline legal as it is really in the sidewall.





    So right now I am rethinking the decision I made to buy the Grabbers and I may well have to get a set of 17" Dynamics and something that has a taller sidewall even though they will not have the speed rating. I don't think I can fit anything much larger on the 18"s as they will rub in the rear wheel arch where the rear air conditioning pipes are.

    My advice to anyone who likes to air down for traction in rough country would be to avoid anything in the stadard size and try to find something with a taller sidewall. I don't know of anything in standard size that has a better sidewall.

    Timj.
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  2. #2
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    I agree GG AT2's do bag a bit so you dont need to airdown quite as much. I may go to around 26psi front and 28psi rear for those rocky/stoney forestry tracks or quite often leave them at (slightly soft) road pressures 36psi front and 38psi rear with no issues (yet).

    One difference is I'm running 255/65/R16's so the extra 1" in side wall probably gives better absorbtion.

    Grip wise, excellent on wet or dry bitumen and mud (for an AT)

  3. #3
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    Hey Tim,

    I agree. I had the GG's on my D3. I tore one without knowing on a trip to Coffs harbour, was scrambling up a shaly piece of track and must have sliced the side wall. Didnt realise till we were doing 100kms + and rear felt washy. Pulled over it was flat. I had put up an assessment somewhere on the GG's in that they are a better option to the wranglers in terms of grip. In terms of strength, when aired down there is little or no protection for sidewall or rim. I came back from that trip and the new rims I had were chipped to pieces. I also had to have another GG repaired, though on that occasion it could have happened to another tyre. If I had kept the D3, I was looking at Mickey Thompson MTZ's in a 275, as I had the V8..18 inch rims were my minimum.

    Regards

    Stevo

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    Tim - it's never a good thing to wreck tyres and rims - but it's worse when they are relatively new.

    Supporting a comment from Stevo, I can vouch for the Mickey thompson MTZ's - I had mine on for 24 hrs before the Sundown trip - no chips, no damage - brilliant grip.

    The Mickeys sidewalls "stand up" - even when aired down - and are actually a reasonable tyre on road too. My attitude is - if you're going to swap between road and offroad tyres - go all the way!
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  5. #5
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    Unfortunately massive rim size leaving only enough room for lower profile tyres are the one big drawback of the modern 4WD (bar defender and base models of various brands). There are times when you should air down and having the best traction control systems in the world are not going to get such vehicles everywhere, or at the least do so kindly to the vehicle and the track...and the result will be damaged rims and tyres (unless you have a whole set of spare rims and tyres to go offroading with which is a giant pain for most people and very expensive).

    Cheers

  6. #6
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    If you're going to spend $100 000 or so on a new 4WD, I don't see spending $600 on 4 x 17" steel rims and a set of decent off-road tyres as overly expensive. It's probably the responsible thing to do. Tyres on the 17" rims will give more than adequate flotation - I've never had a problem with the D3 in sand.

    I agree that the Mickey Thompson MTZ is an excellent off-road tyre, and pretty good on-road too. I had them on my D3 for 20 000 or so km, before I got the Mickey Thompson ATZ for on-road use. Can't say enough good things about them.

    Cheers,

    Gordon

  7. #7
    Timj is offline Wizard Silver Subscriber
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    Thanks for the replies guys,

    I should probably clarify some things here. I bought General Grabbers after a long process of trying to find out something about every tyre that would fit and after reading lots of posts on forums both here and overseas. I also took into account the legalities of changing tyres here in Queensland. There is also an issue with the model that I have with rear airconditioning that has some pipes inside a plastic bump in the back wheel arch. This apparently causes rubbing and eventually damage to the pipes if the tyres are too large.

    Legally here in Queensland we cannot increase the diameter of the tyre by more than 15mm, have to have at least the same load rating and as far as I can work out we cannot put on a tyre with a lower speed rating. More than anything the speed rating limits the available tyres. I have a very expensive vehicle that I am willing to take off road and the cost of the steel rims is not that much compared to the vehicle but I still want my insurance to pay out if I damage it seriously.

    I'm kind of p***ed off at the moment because it seems like I made the wrong decision despite all the work I put into trying to make the right one. I believed that I had the right compromise of still legal but tough enough to take offroad. It may come down to running tyres that are technically illegal and hoping that no one will notice. That's a pretty big gamble though. It would be great if we had the national code here in Qld that allowed up to 50mm increase, though I am not sure what it says about speed ratings.

    One thing extra too - The first puncture happened with 24psi in the tyres which exposed the sidewalls way too much. After that we put 30psi in all tyres and still the second puncture happened. I am not sure if that is also when the rim damage happened as that appeared to still be holding air and may have happened earlier. After that we went up to 40psi with one standard wrangler now on the wheel and did not have another puncture but by then we were almost through anyway.

    Tim.
    Snowy - 2010 Range Rover Vogue
    Clancy - 1978 Series III SWB Game.
    Henry - 1976 S3 Trayback Ute with 186 Holden
    Gumnut - 1953 Series I 80"
    Poverty - 1958 Series I 88"
    Barney - 1979 S3 GS ex ADF with 300tdi
    Arnie - 1975 710M Pinzgauer

  8. #8
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    IIRC you can put on a tyre with a lower speed rating, and limit your speed, not that that will effect anyone in Australia, but not a lower load rating.

    How did the unbalanced tyre on the front go on the way home?

    CC

  9. #9
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    Tim,

    To keep legal and still have a robust set of tyres for touring/offroad, I'd recommend getting a set of 17" rims and shod them with 245/70/17 Cooper STT. Alternatives are Maxxis Bighorn, made in 255/65/17 or 245/70/17 and 114Q rating. Kumho make a 265/65/17 AT tyre, but I'm not sure of the load rating?

    Cheers,

    Gordon

  10. #10
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    It makes base model rims look pretty attractive

    PS. There a a ****e load of D3 owners that would have paid nothing like 100 gorrillas for their car

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