Tires for F-450

iamtheari

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One of my partnerships has a 2008 Ford F-450. The rear tires are showing sidewall cracks so I guess it's time to get at least 4 new tires, maybe 6. Our main use for the pickup is to pull a trailer with medium size equipment (e.g., a Bobcat T650 which should be about 9,000 lb) to a destination about 60 miles away. It's about 30 miles of pavement, 15 miles of decent gravel with moderate grades, and 10 miles of two-track dirt roads, also on moderate grades. It sees year-round use here in the tundra. It is used probably once a month at most.

The current fronts are Hankook DH07 in 245/70R19.5. The rears are Toyo Hyparadial in the same size. The rears are the ones with cracking sidewalls. The fronts look to be fine. But I'm okay replacing all 6 if it makes sense. Does anyone here have recommendations for us?
 
Just put Cooper's on my f550. No complaints so far. Beat the hell out of the stock Continentals.
 
Just put Cooper's on my f550. No complaints so far. Beat the hell out of the stock Continentals.
Thanks. Which Coopers? Any experience off the pavement? I'm totally new to commercial type tires but so far I do know that I don't want to spend that much dough to get 6 of something I hate. :)
 
I run Cooper Discoverer AT3 xlt on my Excursion. Good wear, not too noisy, good enough on gravel, snow (only tested in 8-10") and slick boat ramps. Just a good all around all-terrain. I wouldn't want to rely on them in truly nasty/deep mud or snow, but for mostly paved use with occasional runs in the soggy pasture or icy road they've done fine.

No complaints with Nitto TerraGrapplers either, but I like the Coopers more.
 
Thanks. Which Coopers? Any experience off the pavement? I'm totally new to commercial type tires but so far I do know that I don't want to spend that much dough to get 6 of something I hate. :)

The one takeaway I have on tires for this size truck and up is the role of the sidewall. In a commercial truck type tire, the sidewall has more of a load bearing roll resulting in tire pressure being more critical, so airing down for offroad work is not a good choice, especially when loaded. This results in the tire being more of a pizza cutter when on soft surfaces.
 
The one takeaway I have on tires for this size truck and up is the role of the sidewall. In a commercial truck type tire, the sidewall has more of a load bearing roll resulting in tire pressure being more critical, so airing down for offroad work is not a good choice, especially when loaded. This results in the tire being more of a pizza cutter when on soft surfaces.
Thanks for that. It makes sense but I hadn’t thought about it. I’m not a hardcore off-roader so I don’t tend to mess with tire pressure or try to get through the two-tracks when it’s muddy. I just need something that can keep me moving up the gravel hills with a load on.
 
Roadmaster257. Most of my driving is highway. I do go on job sites and have to get in gravel or turf for my crane to reach, only 25'. Haven't had a problem there. But it's not far off road. The original Continentals sucked. They'd shed random chunks and finally had a blowout on a rear dual. Sounded like a .308.
 
I run Cooper Discoverer AT3 xlt on my Excursion. Good wear, not too noisy, good enough on gravel, snow (only tested in 8-10") and slick boat ramps. Just a good all around all-terrain. I wouldn't want to rely on them in truly nasty/deep mud or snow, but for mostly paved use with occasional runs in the soggy pasture or icy road they've done fine.

No complaints with Nitto TerraGrapplers either, but I like the Coopers more.

My truck currently has Michelins but I've looked at Coopers as replacements when the time comes. Some suggest I use what came on the vehicle but I've read some great reviews on Cooper tires and they are a little less expensive. I did put Hankook tires on my van. They were a good tire for the price ...
 
I have been running Cooper tires for years, and have been extremely satisfied. Never a premature failure or lumpy ride, and good life. Very satisfied.
 
I ran Cooper tires on pickups and 3/4 ton vans. Nothing but good luck.

One time I bought Goodyears for a 3/4 ton pickup that towed a open race car trailer. At 23 miles the left rear blew, doing damage to the fender. Luckily I made the remaining 70 miles to the track, then got 1 mile from home before the right rear blew, again damage to the fender. A Goodyear service center mounted the tires and set them at recommended air pressures after weighing the loaded truck and trailer. The service center was good enough to refund the money for the tires but the damage went another few years before it was settled.

So no Goodyears for me. And as much as I liked running Cooper tires it is unlikely I will trust anything Goodyear has it's hands in.

Presently I have Michelin's on my truck and have no complaints, but I am not sure I am wanting to pay the high price to replace with the same brand.
 
Michelin is best but expensive. I think falken is close to Michelin quality at a better price. Hankook is pretty good also.
I don't like Cooper's or Goodyear.
 
Given that you're running 19.5s, I would question whether the things most folks on here are used to running would be available. Commercial tires tend to be a different ball game.

The main thing is you've got steer/all position and drive tires. Given your description of how this gets used, I would make sure to put "drive" style tires on with some good treads, which is probably what you have now. Replacing all 6 isn't necessarily needed, but if you a 4x4 truck and the fronts are steers, it might make sense so you have more traction. With that kind of use you're describing, the tires will develop cracks before they run out of tread. So I would more look at an aggressive tread pattern and leave it at that.
 
Given that you're running 19.5s, I would question whether the things most folks on here are used to running would be available. Commercial tires tend to be a different ball game.

The main thing is you've got steer/all position and drive tires. Given your description of how this gets used, I would make sure to put "drive" style tires on with some good treads, which is probably what you have now. Replacing all 6 isn't necessarily needed, but if you a 4x4 truck and the fronts are steers, it might make sense so you have more traction. With that kind of use you're describing, the tires will develop cracks before they run out of tread. So I would more look at an aggressive tread pattern and leave it at that.
Thanks for the detailed thoughts on tread wear. I'll have to research the fronts we have a bit more -- the truck is a 4x4 and I definitely want to get the benefit of that when it's needed. The DH07 on the front are marketed by Hankook as a 16-ply, M+S rated, regional haul, drive position tire. So I think I'm good there unless it's important to match fronts to rears.
 
I wouldn't worry about matching fronts to rears.
 
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