Truck or Jeep Tires - Choosing The Best Tires For Your Ride

Truck or Jeep tires are a lot more important than most people think. One of the most important truck parts items affecting your ride is the contact with the ground. A good tire can be what allows you to take a new trail, a bad tire can be what ruins a trip in a heartbeat. There are a lot of choices for tires out there, however. It can be a little intimidating choosing the right truck tires, but the good news is that there a lot of choices, so you can always find a good match for your needs if you know how to look.

 

UNDERSTANDING TIRE MARKINGS

Every truck or Jeep tire has some markings along its sidewall. These denote the size, load range, and type of tire you’re looking at. For example, you might see (whatever tire size you use in your photo) or something similar. These sizes should correlate to your wheels. A truck parts tire technician or custom truck builder like us should be able to tell you how big a tire you can fit with a leveling kit, suspension lift kit or air suspension without any chassis or inner fender rubbing.

TIRE TYPES AND TREADS

Once you have the sizing and type of tire you need, the next decision to make involves what you plan on doing with your tires. There are 3 main types of treads, and we’ll go over each below.

 

ALL-SEASON

All-Season Truck & Jeep Tires are made for on-road performance to handle most weather conditions on the pavement. They are very good for hauling and towing and for maintaining confident contact with the pavement. All-Seasons are the best for quiet rides, better fuel economy, and on road handling. 

All-Terrain Truck & Jeep  tires strike a good balance between on-road and off-road performance. These are good for people who spend 70% of the time on road and 30% of the time off the road, but don’t want to ruin their handling dynamics on the highway. All-Terrain tires are the best choice for people who may use to go to work in the city, farm or ranch, or often go adventuring in forests or dirt and gravel roads.

 

All-Terrain tires can have a couple modifiers that show where it’s able to go.

?     The deep snow logo with a 3 peak mountain with a snowflake that marks the tire as capable of traversing through deep snow and severe winter conditions like ice.

?     M stands for mud, and means that the tire is capable of pulling itself through mud.

?     S stands for snow which means this tire can make contact through most snows that aren’t too deep.

 

The only small drawback for all-terrain tires is that when it comes to on road performance, these truck parts truck tires tend to be a tad bit louder and don’t contact the pavement as well as all-season tires. This is due to the larger tread blocks and wider voids between the treads. All-Terrain tires are still our number one pick tires for all daily driving trucks, Jeeps and SUV's that like to go off road some of the time. Radial tires just do not look aggressive enough to be on any truck. IMO

MUD-TERRAIN

Mud-Terrain tires are built for off-road performance. These truck tires are meant to go where other tires just can’t get to. If you plan on using your rig as an OHV or trail vehicle, 80% of the time then these tires are the way to go.

 

With giant tread blocks, studs and knurls on the sidewalls and shoulders, thick, reinforced sidewalls, and huge voids meant to grab anything they touch, mud-terrain tires can get you through mud or snow without digging holes, over rocks without popping a sidewall or blowing a seam, and even churn through streambeds on those treacherous water crossings. Truck Parts

 

However, when it comes to driving on the road, these truck tires are crazy loud, don’t contact the pavement well, and get feathered, a wear pattern where the treads become terribly uneven, often causing steering wheel shudders, and torn up on any type of packed or paved surface. If you do decide to use mud-terrain tires on highways for that aggressive look, then look for “hybrid” tires that use new truck parts technology and tread shapes to reduce road noise, feathering, and pavement shredding.

 As for a daily driver truck, Jeep or SUV tires that on the road 80% of the time and off-road 20% of the time our # 1 pick of tires would be a (All Terrain Tire).

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT US AT TUFFTRUCKPARTS.COM FOR GREAT TIRE DISCOUNTS ON YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS.