HillBillyRedNeck
New Member
I have toyo open country Mt' s, they do great in most conditions. I havn't had problems starting out on wet roads either, and i live in the PNW.
I have about 40K on mine right now.
It seems the GY Wranglers on my truck are sort of mixed relative to wear (not a good thing)! I guess the previous owner had some problems with them also!
With the price of good tires these days I am going to be very careful getting a new set. Lets not forget we are talking about 800 to $1000.00 plus for a set of 4, ouch!
Well you guys have come up with things I never thought of!
I really like the bags of dirt from HD/Lowe’s idea, and God knows I have some low areas in my lawn:laughing:.
I know about building a (2x4) frame and putting the weight between the wheels.
I'll check out some of the tires mentioned, but I have a hard time believing a lot of you have no problems taking off on an incline in rainy weather with no weight. Trucks are so light in the rear (some worse than others) it's just natural for some slippage problems.
I had a Chevy pick up and it was worse than my Tacoma's, I had to leave sand bags in the rear. However I did have an extra leave or 2 added to the rear suspension for help when hauling heavy loads of wood, (no sand bags then)
What he said! Changeling, If you have a Home Depot, Lowes, or Menards, you will find these pre-filled sand bags much easier to buy and they come in various weights. In my opinion adding sand bags for rainy weather is kind of pointless. It all comes down to the tires. With past trucks, I've only had sandbags in the winter.
If you do get sand bags, make yourself a box out of 2x4's to fit between the wheel wells in the bed, so the weight will be directly over the axle and the bags wont slide around.
I'm running Cooper AT3's, and they have been nothing but great on wet roads. Its been an very wet autumn and the truck has seen a lot of rain, so I've been pushing their limits to see their breaking point, never lost traction. I've heard nothing but bad things about Goodyear Wrangler's wet road performance. If sand baggin' it doesn't solve your problem, you might want to consider a change of tires.
TJ 11, If you don't mind asking where did you get your AT3's, I'm going to have to do something pretty soon.
Yesterday I turned from a side lane onto the main lane in a Wall Mart parking lot (Slight grade), It had been raining all day. She came up sideways on me quicker than a heart beat! Probably going 2 or 3 miles an hour at the most. I brought it back under control, but man did it happen quick!