Bama_Swampfox
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Peter
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2020
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 112
- Reaction score
- 147
- Location
- Birmingham, AL
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland (09-14-3pm) ; Kubota 2910 Tractor; 1964 BP-1
- Occupation
- Retired, thank God
- Thread starter
- #1
I guess this post falls under the category of "so what?" but maybe it'll help someone making a decision about upgrading the standard tires on stock Overland rims.
I've never liked the Bridgestones that came with my Gladiator. They were terrible in the rain - stopping, turning and taking off on slick roads. They also had some sort of "force induced vibration" at highway speeds that came and went despite rebalancing. So, when I got a nail in the left rear at 34,000 miles (they were nearly down to the wear bars already), it was just the excuse I needed to replace them.
I'd toyed with the idea of 35s and new rims but it would be purely be for looks - I rarely go off road and even then, it's pretty tame, dirt roads with few if any obstacles. I looked on-line at manufacturers specs for replacements that were the same outside diameter as the original 255/70 R18s but wider, that would still fit the rims.
I settled on 275/65 R18 Michelin LTX2 Defenders which are the same diameter but almost an inch wider than the stock size. They are one step up from "pizza cutters" but they look better IMO and man, such an improvement on the road over the Bridgestones (they should be for the price).
In any case, I think the truck drives and handles much better and the speedometer is accurate over a measured mile (60 miles an Hour for 60 seconds).
I've never liked the Bridgestones that came with my Gladiator. They were terrible in the rain - stopping, turning and taking off on slick roads. They also had some sort of "force induced vibration" at highway speeds that came and went despite rebalancing. So, when I got a nail in the left rear at 34,000 miles (they were nearly down to the wear bars already), it was just the excuse I needed to replace them.
I'd toyed with the idea of 35s and new rims but it would be purely be for looks - I rarely go off road and even then, it's pretty tame, dirt roads with few if any obstacles. I looked on-line at manufacturers specs for replacements that were the same outside diameter as the original 255/70 R18s but wider, that would still fit the rims.
I settled on 275/65 R18 Michelin LTX2 Defenders which are the same diameter but almost an inch wider than the stock size. They are one step up from "pizza cutters" but they look better IMO and man, such an improvement on the road over the Bridgestones (they should be for the price).
In any case, I think the truck drives and handles much better and the speedometer is accurate over a measured mile (60 miles an Hour for 60 seconds).
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