henchman24
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2023
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- Location
- Wyoming
- Vehicles
- Dual Motor Cybertruck
I 100% agree all tires are a compromise and they need to be tailored to each use case. Never a one-sized fits all situation. I personally took off the AS tires ASAP since I deal with a lot of snow, ice, and ~20% of my miles are off pavement. I wouldn't want them for any of those situations. Though crusing around town or on the interstate, they are a far better tire than any AT option (they look horrendous though).I like the OEM All-Terrain tires for my summer usage because I don't change my tires between different environments (only seasonally). So, for the summer they are a good all-rounder, smooth and quiet with good road manners, good efficiency, more flat resistant than the All-Season and I can make them work quite well off-road during the dry months without much concern for sidewall cuts and punctures.
I've heard people who have had both on a Cybertruck say the OEM All-Seasons have a harsher ride quality (vs. OEM All-Terrain) on less than perfect roads. And I do a lot of rugged roads and trails in the summer. To be honest, I don't think the OEM All-seasons would be suitable for the kind of surfaces I would take them on.
In the end, tires are always a compromise, you have to pick tires that make the most sense for your driving environment and how you use them.
The AS have enough load rating for the vast majority of activities while being better on-road for pretty much everything else. For on-road stuff, a lower load rating might actually be preferable. Not as stiff for a more compliant ride and more predictable grip. Lighter for more efficiency and even smoother ride. Tend to wear a bit better too (though that difference is minimal). The load rating really matters for heavy payloads or a lot of tongue weight (only one of these applies to the CT). Which the CT can have a lot of payload and you can go beyond that capability on AS tires... but it would take ~1900lbs of payload plus people to do so. Most won't be pushing things that far. We're talking a whole bed full of rock and 3+ people to hit that number. On tongue weight, you shouldn't be adding any more than what AS tires can handle anyway... that limitation is far lower than what either tire will allow.AT have higher load rating than AS though...
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