I think your rig is mine's twin, separated at birth!!! (See CruiserGarage!)
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roncruiser said:Just bought a set of the Bridgestone Duelers A/T Revo’s. 285/75/16. Had them installed during lunch.
elmariachi said:Anyone had the BFG AT and then had these? I am about to buy BFGs again and would like to hear from someone who has had both on an 80.
Jim
roncruiser said:I don't totally agree with the "wander", but I know what you mean. I like to see it more as "tracking" better.
turbocruiser said:I recently put the REVOS on the Crusher. Not the same thing exactly but in my opinion the REVO is a much better tire basically for everything. HTH
tltaylor22 said:Who has got the most miles on these tires. I've been looking into them and have seen a number of people complain about tread life. A bunch of people complianed that they were worn to the wear marks at 20K or the rubber got really hard thus lost all traction benefits after 10K miles.
Trent
NMuzj100 said:I think hardening of the rubber was a problem of the earlier Bridgestones and was one of the problems corrected on the "Revo". As I understand it the new tire compound should be softer as it wears to provide consistant traction even as the tread wears down.
Dueler AT Revo Spec Sheet - From Bridgestone
UNI-T AQ II Technologies - from Bridgestone
Revo Snow Test (Warning - 100 Series Post)
elmariachi said:Do you know if they are 3 ply sidewalls like BFG? I couldn't find anything on their website.
Jim
Rookie2 said:Jim,
Take a look at post #18, #19 and #20 of this thread. May be what you're looking for.
Rookie2
elmariachi said:BFG has what they call Tri-Guard sidewall construction, three polyester plies. I have always had better luck in rocky terrain with a BFG vs. other tires and I really think this is a factor. My opinion is that the stiffer sidewall as a result of the three ply construction results in firmer cornering and handling. But I am really liking what I hear about this Revo tire.
Jim
turbocruiser said:I agree that the sidewalls on my BFG AT KO's were stiffer and stronger than the ones on the AT REVO's. I have not had an almost deflated REVO on a sharp rock sliding off sideways yet and I'm sorta eager to try to compare but I cannot imagine them doing as well in sharp rocks. I say this even though I love em so much more in almost all ways than any of the BFG's I've had. All a matter of compromise i suppose.![]()
Jim_Chow said:Just looking at the tread pattern (I'm also considering revo's vs. bfg at's), the at's look like they might have problems when rain pools on highways. The blocks in the tread seem like they won't allow water to escape as readily as w/ the revo pattern, at least when the tires wear. The bfg pattern would seem to rely more on thick tread blocks for traction in water, where the water runs in the channels between the blocks but really can't go anywhere. The "Z" pattern on the revo's would seem like they should flick the water outward away from the vehicle. Look at those Michelin & Goodyear passenger car tires for the rain you see in the tv commercials. They basically get their great wet traction by flicking the water out. The bfg's can't do that by the nature of their design. However, they do look like they'd be better in the dirt than the revo's. The tires i have now have a similar pattern as the bfg's and are similarly severe weather rated, but traction on a trip via I-10 from Tucson to Dallas last spring (rained the entire time) sucked. The highway had tire-width grooves worn in the pavement, so water was pooling in there during heavy rains. The rig was going all over the place. Bottom line is, I guess you have to look at your driving needs and trade-off offroading capability vs. on road handling. I'm leaning towards the Revo's.