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"Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:vh2s43$2b5ip$1@dont-email.me...Generally the only complaint I hear about Michelin tires is the price. When I picked up my new truck I was actually a little disappointed to see it came with Michelin truck tires. Now I'll have to wait a few years to wear them out so I can upgrade to some ATs. I'm just to cheap to replace otherwise perfectly good tires.
I think I mentioned it in another thread. Pickup trucks (classic bath
tub bed and std cab on a frame) are usually not very good unless they
have a load in the bed. A 2wd open diff pickup would not be my choice
either that being said from 2001-2017 all my new service trucks were 2WD
with auto locking diffs. (Chevy work trucks) With the normal load of
tools, wire, and hardware they were "okay." I did not unload them to go
hunting for instance. As long as I stuck to the main trails until I
bailed out to walk I didn't even think about it.
Of course tires make a big difference. When I ran trap lines back in
the 80s I used a Ford F150 2WD with stock diff and 31 x 10.5 tires.
With all my traps, coolers, and camp gear it did quite well. If I
remembered to air down all four) it was passable on most sand, but it
would still sink in bottomless sugar sand. I got it stuck a couple
times, but always got it out on my own. Sometimes it took all day, but
that is the life of a wannabe professional outdoorsman. Okay, my first
year I used a Plymouth Volare station wagon. LOL I think if it had the
same tires it would have been better than the pickup.
Bob La Londe
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Ramblers did well in the Baja 500.
That definitely applied to my Ranger in 2WD. It was better in 4WD. If I could get in somewhere with the bed empty I was sure to be able to get out with a load of firewood. Only dirt bike skid recovery reflexes let me drive the Ranger in 2WD on partly dry, partly icy pavement. A particularly difficult icy commute home helped convince me to buy the AWD CRV which was vastly better with (and good without) sticky hydrophilic Michelin Arctic Alpine ice tires. A wet finger rubbed on most tires slides, on the Michelins it grabs and squeaks.
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