I've been thinking about this for about a month now. I sliced open the sidewall of one of my BFG MTs 35x12.5x15 about a month ago. Now granted I know this tire is not known for super strong sidewalls like a Swamper or Michelin military tire, but it doesn't do bad on minis and 40s in our area. Actually, I've seen people run the same trails I'm running with these tires and have them last for 5-6 years even with monthly wheeling trips. This last weekend Uglibus sliced open two of his 37x12.50x15 Goodyear MTRs on the trail. We weren't in a section of overly sharp rock (comparitively for our area). He wasn't overly aired down either. I know a lot of hardcore guys who run the MTRs with great success on their lighter rigs in our area. In my quest to not make the same tire mistake twice I've been reading as much as I can about tires. I've noticed that almost all of the 16" rim sized tires have much higher weight ratings and ply rating than the same sized 15" rim tires. I could be mistaken, but doesn't the load bearing capacity come from the sidewall strength? If this is true, I can see where it would be very beneficial to run the larger rim sizes with higher weight ratings to prevent sidewall failures. Are 80 series too heavy for 15" rimed tires for wheeling? I also read about another 91/92 80 who also has been ripping out sidewalls on 15" rims today in California. The whole thing has me pondering the rim size debate.