2020 Defender Talk about the new 2020 Land Rover Defender
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One-year ownership anniversary - on/off-road P300 D110 S

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  #11  
Old 10-05-2021 | 12:03 PM
TrioLRowner's Avatar
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I confused you, sorry.

Less pressure = more comfort and higher stressed sidewalls, for any tire.

I scrape trees and rocks and most of all don't enjoy changing tires, so a little less comfort is fine -- particularly in a JLR modern product, which are all very comfortable.

Also, I aired down and back up only once in several days, and drove a couple miles on asphalt, so thought the tires would thank me for not going too low.
 

Last edited by TrioLRowner; 10-05-2021 at 12:05 PM.
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dragosstoica (09-21-2023)
  #12  
Old 10-05-2021 | 12:10 PM
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Originally Posted by TrioLRowner
I confused you, sorry.

Less pressure = more comfort and higher stressed sidewalls, for any tire.

I scrape trees and rocks and most of all don't enjoy changing tires, so a little less comfort is fine -- particularly in a JLR modern product, which are all very comfortable.

Also, I aired down and back up only once in several days, and drove a couple miles on asphalt, so thought the tires would thank me for not going too low.
Okay, fair enough. That's a good trade-off (giving up comfort for fewer flats) if it holds true. But I never had an incident with a true off-road tire other than rolling a bead a couple times, but that was my bias ply Intercos running at 7 psi on slickrock with extreme side-load from hillside crossing. Never had any problem at 14 with regular radials. But to be fair, a 2-door Wrangler with aluminum bumpers and armor (for weigh reduction) is going to load sidewalls a good bit less than a 5XXX-pound D110. I'll be interested to try my 18" Ridge Grapplers at 18psi and see.

Also, I intend to take up the question at length on my day in Ashville next month.

Cheers!
 
  #13  
Old 10-06-2021 | 12:22 PM
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Originally Posted by PaulLR
I'm pretty sure the OEM Goodyear Wrangler AT tires are more appearance than true AT function. Also, after 10K miles, mine are about half worn when comparing the tread depth to the spare tire.
The OEM Wranglers are crap offroad. I blew 2 tires in less than 2000 miles! I went with General Grabber X3s 265/70/r18. Immensely stronger tire but a bit more road noise, worth the trade off.

Pic taken on 2300 mile road trip into Baja. Had the whole beach to ourselves on the Pacific north of Guerrero Negro.



 
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