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All Terrain Tyre Comparisons
- Guy 2
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I suspect that 1 kg in isolation isn't too bad. The issue is that the Bridgestone HTs, on which the Jimny will likely be delivered, are, I estimate, somewhere between 9.75 and 10 kg per tyre. So the difference you will feel from your test-drive to your 'modded' Jimny will be the new tyre weight minus, say, 10 kg. That's 2-3 kg or more. I reckon that will have an effect.
Not what you wanted to hear, I guess.
Others on this Forum will be better suited to express an opinion.
Cheers
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Guy 2 wrote: Hi MrChips (great handle that), with a quick look I couldn't find the right size of tyre with the link you gave - but that's probably me late at night!
Oponeo,Tyrecomp, Tyreleader, Mytyres, Pneus-on-line, Idealo and TyresGuru all show the Hankook RF10 in 215/75 R15 with a load rating of either 100 or 100/97. In this last case, as I understand it, the 97 rating is for double tyres i.e. x4 (6 in total), on the rear of something like a large double cab. 97 is then the load on each tyre. If I'm wrong someone will put me straight on this.
Thanks Guy, that dual rating thing has had me puzzled for some weeks now. I now understand that double wheels each side of an axle have a slightly reduced load rating. It would be great if someone could say what is stamped on the side of their Hankooks for load rating. Cheers
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- Andy2640
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Well yeah...when it translates to that much extra weight, it shines another light on the decision.
I'm a few shaves off pulling the trigger on em now.....
Just had a price of £86.00 per tyre, with a £20 fitting fee per wheel. Inc. balance etc.
Anyways, nice1 Guy, you've been a great addition to this forum since you joined, informative and enthusiastic so you are . Cheers buddy!
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- MilkyRon
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- Guy 2
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Just pleased if some of it helped.
I'm a few days away from a proper list of weights - but since you sound as if you are about to 'press the button' my concluding comments on your present dilemma are:
If it were me and I was looking for a good performance from a 215/75 R15 All Terrain - then my choice would be the Toyo Open Country AT Plus at 12.15 kg per tyre. It's actually lighter than the Cooper AT3 Sport in the smaller 195/80 R15 size (13 kg), and virtually the same weight as the Grabber AT3 195/80 R15 (12 kg). Everything suggests it has still retained the toughness of the former Toyo AT2, but it has just been well engineered for (relative) lightness.
If you do change your mind and go for the 195/80 R15 size then I think the options open up a bit more. The Hankook and the Toyo AT Plus will both be good. The Yokohama is just a bit heavier. Lightest of the lot is the Bridgestone AT001 195/80 at 10.485 Kg - BUT it appears to be a much more road-oriented AT pattern and if you intending to "forge your way over the hills and valleys" then maybe it isn't for you?
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- stiffsteve204me
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MilkyRon wrote: £20 per tyre seems very steep. I usually pay £5
^^^^^^^^ This.
Never paid more than £5 a corner.
( They are probably charging you £15 each, for filling with nitrogen.:laugh: )
Steve.
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