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Thread: Tour report - 19" Maxxis vs General Grabbers AT

  1. #1
    JamesH Guest

    Tour report - 19" Maxxis vs General Grabbers AT

    Greetings

    After taking the plunge and opting for the new LT Maxxis, Ive finally managed to to take them out to the places I got them for. I have done 8300km along the Great Central Road, Buchanan Highway, and assorted off track trips poking around for a bush camp site. I was traveling with (aside from an Amorok and Prado) with another D4 towing a Cub Camper which had the General Grabbers on (I think they were the old model not the AT2s).

    As many of you know, the GCR and the Buchanan are actually pretty good. There were stretches with shale and corrugations but generally all OK. It was not our intention to go deliberately looking for challenging tracks but merely to get to the places we wanted to go and have a looksee.

    We were driving around some station tracks with an owner checking out the country, rock art and the cattle and this day was much more challenging on tyres. Rocks, creek crossings with steep banks, rim grinding river rocks, rough shale, sand and bulldust, potholes, the works. etc. The Maxxis really gave me a sense of security that I was looking for. It's just my gut talking but I felt the tyres were coping really well and it it turned out they did, not punctures, no rim damage. The tyres themselves are in good nick, not chunks missing etc.

    But the Grabbers were good too, definitly good enough for GCR and Buchanan. As good as the Maxxis were i had decided that if the Grabbers coped with everything this trip threw at them, while towing, they would be good enough for me as they are quieter on bitumen and give a better ride. The Maxxis are noisy at 60-80 but the ride is fine. As good as the Grabbers did the day out on the station exploring was too much for them and a puncture occurred on the shale which with investigation looked repairable (was straight through the tread not the sidewall) but turned out not to be. Luck plays a part but there it is.

    Sometimes on these light trips you get brief challenging sections you want/need to do and you have to choose your tyres for those brief sections alas. It turns out the Maxxis vs Grabbers was a one puncture competition on one day and Ive been tolerating the road noise all this time for that one day on the track.

    I did not have to unload to access a spare, use the crappy jack and I felt confident that I had tyres for the job, so the Maxxis gave me what I wanted from them and will use them again.

    Cheers
    JH

  2. #2
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    Thanks James, what pressures did you run over the various conditions?
    Dave.

    Dave.
    Hi.
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  3. #3
    JamesH Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by DI5CO View Post
    Thanks James, what pressures did you run over the various conditions?
    Dave.
    Set them at 40 all round and left them there. Did not do enough sand to worry. Rarely went over 80kmh off the bitumen. When it was rough went 60.

    [correction: I forgot that I did drop the fronts to 38 once the road turned to gravel. apologies, I had forgotten]

  4. #4
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    I know nothing about those size tyres and rim combos in relation to pressures, but 40psi seems high even for low profile offroad? Going down to 34-35 is to risky with that size tyre?
    Sorry for the questions but im considering adding a d4 to our driveway and just trying to build up my knowledge

  5. #5
    JamesH Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by 1nando View Post
    I know nothing about those size tyres and rim combos in relation to pressures, but 40psi seems high even for low profile offroad? Going down to 34-35 is to risky with that size tyre?
    Sorry for the questions but im considering adding a d4 to our driveway and just trying to build up my knowledge
    These are light truck tyres, I have a roo bar and was heavily loaded so don't take 40psi as general advice, just what the salesman said for these specific tyres. I followed it and did not pay a penalty. On corrugations I lowered he speed. If they had got really bad I would have dropped the pressure but it didn't turn out to be necessary [correction: I forgot that I did drop the fronts to 38 once the road turned to gravel. apologies, I had forgotten]

    The only general comment I'd make is that on 19" rims people have experienced bulging and increased sidewall puncture risk when dropping pressures too much. The D4 is an amazing off-road vehicle but the 19" rims are seen by many as a negative attribute. Some of us buy the specialist custom made 18" rims, the rest of us try to choose tyres that suit us from the limited but growing range of options.

  6. #6
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    I'm thinking the same as you James and going for GGs or Maxxis. Had Maxxis in 17" on our Prado (sorry I said that word ) and GGs on 2 Deafeners and they were both good tyres.
    Maxxis much softer ride than BFGs and really made for a different ride with the Prado. No problems with either brand actually but if BFG start making a 19" I'll go for them because of the better sidewall protection.
    Cheers.
    AlanH.

  7. #7
    JamesH Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by ATH View Post
    I'm thinking the same as you James and going for GGs or Maxxis. Had Maxxis in 17" on our Prado (sorry I said that word ) and GGs on 2 Deafeners and they were both good tyres.
    Maxxis much softer ride than BFGs and really made for a different ride with the Prado. No problems with either brand actually but if BFG start making a 19" I'll go for them because of the better sidewall protection.
    Cheers.
    AlanH.
    Hi Alan, my summary would be that Grabbers are the superior tyre for on road and will handle most off-road situations. I would take them happily down the Gibb for example. It gets a bit more complicated when you are pulling off and checking out gorges etc.

    The Maxxis are tough (someone here would disagree, he got some and had immediate problems with blow-outs). I knew they were just by pulling up over the kerb to park my ca at a friends place. You could feel the OEM Wranglers squish to the rim but Maxxis felt as they should. And when I was doing all my hard work on the station tracks the felt re-assuring.

    Remember though that you just can't compare tyres across sizes. On one rim a type maybe brilliant on another size they are rubbish.

    I had a 200 Series owning mate co-drive me home from Timber Creek to Perth. He complimented the car on its quietness! I told him he should try one without the Maxxis. He also complimented on its get up and boogie when he overtook two four trailer ore road trains outside Port Hedland. They are really good cars.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by JamesH View Post
    ...

    Remember though that you just can't compare tyres across sizes. On one rim a type maybe brilliant on another size they are rubbish.

    ...
    Too true. Its not easy to find a GG tyre that is light truck designation. I looked for 18" wheel GG tyres some time ago, and couldn't find a suitable tyre. I've had then and still have the same GGs on 18" wheels, but they are not LT tyres. I worry when towing and with a high ball weight ( maybe 300 kg at times) that I really should have LT tyres for the back wheels. Evidently one can get some 265/65/18 onto the D4; I am not sure about the gearing, but a 65 profile has a lot of forgiveness IMO. Tyre noise for me is also an issue. The GG are as quiet as the factory 19" tyres.

  9. #9
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    "They are really good cars. " Must be better now than the model our boy bought when they came out. No end of oil consumption and transmission probs. Took Tojo 3 years to do anything about it and then it required major engine work and a new transmission.
    If I'd ever had that much trouble with a Landy I'd never have had 5 of the things.......
    As I rotate all 5 tyres at a time I want them all to be the same obviously. My tow ball weight wouldn't be anywhere near 3 tonne so really I don't think LT is necessary ..... I've never actually checked but are BFG AT designated LT or not? I was just thinking that their side walls are tougher than most being 3 ply.
    Whatever, thanks for all the feedback, I'm sticking with the original fitted Goodyear until they're worn out as there seems to be no market for low kay 19s..... not at a reasonable price anyway.
    Cheers.
    AlanH.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by ATH View Post
    "They are really good cars. " Must be better now than the model our boy bought when they came out. No end of oil consumption and transmission probs. Took Tojo 3 years to do anything about it and then it required major engine work and a new transmission.
    If I'd ever had that much trouble with a Landy I'd never have had 5 of the things.......
    I think James was referring to his D4?
    2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 SE remapped to RRS output, Alaska White, GME XRS-330c, IIDTool BT, Dual Battery, Apple CarPlay, OEM Retrofitted: Cornering lights, Door card lights, Power + Heated Seats, Logic 7 audio

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