RocketGhost
Well-known member
- First Name
- Spencer
- Joined
- May 22, 2024
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 433
- Reaction score
- 533
- Location
- Memphis TN
- Vehicles
- 2022 Lariat ER
20k miles and my stock Grabbers are at 7/32. I run them at the recommended 42psi.
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I made 27k on my original Hancook tires. I replaced with Michelin Defender 70k guaranteed miles. I don't think it will make it. I live in the mountains with lots of curved roads, they seem to be lasting the first 10k better than the Hancook.What are people's experience with the Lightning's tire life. I have 16,000 miles on mine and they are looking quite worn. I may be able to get through the New England winter, but I do not think they will make 25,000 miles. I am careful with the psi and do not pull any heavy weight other than the truck itself.
The heavy Lightning is fine on level, smooth roads like freeways and my tires would have probably lasted 50K+ miles. I live in the mountains with curvy mountain roads which accommodate over 80% of my driving as I mostly stay local. As a result, I had to change at 20K miles when my tires wore to 7/32. My new Michelin Defenders are projected for 70K miles..... we'll see in about 50K more miles (or less)I’m surprised by the number of Lightning owners reporting short tire life. I am at 57K miles on the OEM Michelins (2023 Pro SR) and I’m confident I’ll get to 60K with margin to spare. I’ve rotated every 12K-15K miles and currently run the tires a couple PSI high.
I have two homes, one in the Mojave Desert and the other in the rural hills of the Ozark Mountains. In both locations I am miles from the nearest paved road, and on my driveway alone (in the Ozarks) the truck has to negotiate a long, vertical trek up a difficult to maintain rocky, rutted surface after miles of twisting, climbing roadway from the nearest state highway route. And wherever it is, my Lightning frequently carries loads - trash, gravel, construction materials, gear, etc.The heavy Lightning is fine on level, smooth roads like freeways and my tires would have probably lasted 50K+ miles. I live in the mountains with curvy mountain roads which accommodate over 80% of my driving as I mostly stay local. As a result, I had to change at 20K miles when my tires wore to 7/32. My new Michelin Defenders are projected for 70K miles..... we'll see in about 50K more miles (or less)