have these tires on a 2008 Ram with a leveling kit on front. Have run them for over 40,000 miles with no problems. I am getting ready for a second set soon.
Rating: 10
Product Details: "Firestone Destination MT Mud Tire" by Editor - posted: Mon July 9, 2007 - Rating: 9.21
Last Review Posted by Unregistered - posted: Tue February 10, 2015 2:21pm
Horrible tread design they wont last once they get wore a little are just like slicks. They dont ride good, overall poor tire, I didnt care for them. I tried them in a 315-75-16 and made my truck ride and handle horrible.
Rating: 1
Product Details: "Falken Tire WildPeak A/T" by Editor - posted: Wed July 28, 2010 - Rating: 6.86
Last Review Posted by Unregistered - posted: Tue February 10, 2015 2:18pm
My truck is a 1998 Toyota TRD that I bought brand new. I run 26 (front) and 28 (rear) in them just like the sticker on the door jamb suggests. I live in western Colorado.
My first set (Revo I purchased in 2003 for $650) lasted about 26,000 miles. Then they became noisy and rough-riding until warmed up. My second set(Revo II, purchased in 2010 for $625, at the same place, go figger) are at 19,000 miles. The little lines in the outside tread blocks are just about gone now, but the centers of the treads are okay. After sitting for a week in my garage or so they take about 15 miles to "warm up". During that time they ride very rough, rumbling and vibrating as though I had a bad wheel. Or two. Or all...
Once burned, twice shy. For the last 2-3k miles the tires howl like a wheel bearing is going out. I will probably replace the tires next spring when the weather warms up, but I will not be using Bridgestone again. Oh, and in 1991 I also had Bridgestone Desert Dueller tires on a 1987 Toyota 4WD. Those tires were absolute crap too.
While these are excellent tires for about 15,000 miles, the noise and wear characteristics after that make them very expensive. 50,000 mile tread warranty? Only on a test bench my friend.
Rating: 3
Product Details: "Bridgestone Dueler A/T Revo All Terrain Tire" by Editor - posted: Fri June 27, 2008 - Rating: 7.18
Last Review Posted by 1badcj8 - posted: Sat November 8, 2014 6:07am
I run a set of these in a 40x17 on my 1=Ton Jeep Scrambler and they do very well off road in truly Extreme conditions. I do very hard trails with lots of rocks. While the road manners are OK remember that is NOT why you buy a tire like this. Buying this tire and then saying here they are bad because they are noisy simply makes no sense what so ever. I avoid mud as much as I can so I can not speak to how they are in the mud. But for an Extreme Terrain tire I will run these for a long time to come...
Rating: 8
Product Details: "Nitto Mud Grappler Extreme Terrain MT Tire" by Editor - posted: Tue January 30, 2007 - Rating: 8.18
Last Review Posted by clasvi - posted: Sun November 2, 2014 11:04am
I gave this tire a 9 only because of it's supreme performance in the deep packed snow of northern most NH VT & Maine. It is almost useless in deep clay-enriched mud. Anyone who tells you different doesn't know the difference between real mud and a mud puddle. Tires wear and handle very well on road for such an aggressive snow tire. If they were more reasonably priced, I would buy another set for winter.
Rating: 9
Product Details: "Goodyear Wrangler MTR" by Editor - posted: Thu January 25, 2007 - Rating: 7.05
Last Review Posted by clasvi - posted: Sun November 2, 2014 10:54am
I wore out a new set of these on a rubicon. They perform well when new but, have a shallow tread depth for a mud tire when new. I began early on, to notice a reduction in performance due to tread wear. If your a offroad wannabe, these tires will work for you just fine. If you venture back into remote wilderness areas where your life depends on not getting stuck, look for a different tire.
Rating: 4
Product Details: "Maxxis BigHorn Radial LT Tire" by Editor - posted: Tue July 15, 2008 - Rating: 8.16
Last Review Posted by Lefty19 - posted: Tue October 21, 2014 3:53pm
I had these on a Toyota for 2 years and there isn't ANYTHING close to out pulling these in MS. mud... PERIOD.
Everyone knows these are the DOG'S BALLS for mud, just except it or you're an IDIOT.
On pavement, these SOB's HUM harder than a $5.00 hooker on Main St and LOUDER. They'll ruin a daily driver by rattling it to death.
They are hard to keep balanced and don't last long on pavement. My set had about 15k on them and MIGHT have made it to 30k on a light Yota if I'd kept them on. I bought them for the WOW factor since know had them in 94' in my area.
I might buy them again since my commute is a total of 6 miles / day! These are just the nastiest tires by looks ever....
Rating: 10
Product Details: "Super Swamper TSL Bogger" by Editor - posted: Thu January 25, 2007 - Rating: 9.15
Last Review Posted by Lefty19 - posted: Tue October 21, 2014 3:45pm
Buckshots have been around for a long time. These were the tires like Super Swampers that came out back in the day and are hard to beat.
I've had a set on a Tacoma when they first came out.... you can get 40-50k off a set running on pavement as well. These tires pull great and are cheap, doesn't get better than that. Some won't use them due to being too narrow, no cool graphics on it or a parlor name but who cares.
Rating: 10
Product Details: "Maxxis MT-754 Buckshot MT Mud Terrain Tire" by Editor - posted: Wed July 16, 2008 - Rating: 6.44
Last Review Posted by Lefty19 - posted: Tue October 21, 2014 3:39pm
I don't know about these tires on heavy trucks but I've had a set on a Taco that lasted over 50k with a small amount of tread left. I don't mean SLICK either but took them off as they did diminish off-road naturally and are CHEAP.
These tires do hum a bit but what mud terrain tire doesn't???? They are not nearly, as bad as, Boggers with humming but they don't pull as well obviously.
This is a tire that handles dirt, gravel, sand (mine were 325/60/18 with less than 10psi) and mud with any mud terrain tire. You're not going to a MUD BOG with these but anything can get stuck if you TRY hard enough. They pull right with the BG Goodwrich Mud TA, Cepek Mud, Goodyear and most of the others except the Bogger or Super Swamper. The good thing though is you can drive on the pavement without rattling your brains or bolts out either.
Rating: 10
Product Details: "Maxxis MT-762 BigHorn Mud Terrain Tire" by Editor - posted: Tue July 15, 2008 - Rating: 8.38