All season / All terrain tyres for a Wrangler..?
Discussion
A little help please?
I’m looking for new tyres to fit my Jeep Wrangler.
Portugal during the summer months, where the car is driven daily on rough unmade / gravel roads. Rural UK during the winter, mainly on road but the odd farm track or similar.
Here’s what I need (and don’t need)...
- UK availability in 285/70/R17
- good in the wet on-road
- rated/intended for winter use - ideally, but not necessarily, 3PMSF
- I don’t need class-leading mud grip / clearing or rock-crawling capabilities
- reasonable road noise / manners
- not particularly worried about durability or fuel economy
Possibilities I have identified include:
Yokohama Geolandar A/T G015
Cooper Discoverer A/T3 4S
BF Goodrich All Terrain T/A KO2
Which should I choose and why? Are there other options I should be considering?
Thanks in advance!
I’m looking for new tyres to fit my Jeep Wrangler.
Portugal during the summer months, where the car is driven daily on rough unmade / gravel roads. Rural UK during the winter, mainly on road but the odd farm track or similar.
Here’s what I need (and don’t need)...
- UK availability in 285/70/R17
- good in the wet on-road
- rated/intended for winter use - ideally, but not necessarily, 3PMSF
- I don’t need class-leading mud grip / clearing or rock-crawling capabilities
- reasonable road noise / manners
- not particularly worried about durability or fuel economy
Possibilities I have identified include:
Yokohama Geolandar A/T G015
Cooper Discoverer A/T3 4S
BF Goodrich All Terrain T/A KO2
Which should I choose and why? Are there other options I should be considering?
Thanks in advance!
Any should do what you need. The BFG is the most aggressive and arguably will be the worst on wet tarmac and likely the most noticeable from the steering wheel. But a very good tyre overall. Although they usually cost a fair bit more than the competition.
I don't know if available in your size. Goodyear Wrangler Duratracs are very nice and OEM on several vehicles including Jeeps. And will do exactly what you are after.
Maxxis offer a similar looking tread to the BFG, but is usually cheaper and still very capable. Not 100% the size you where after, but pretty close.
https://www.maxxis.co.uk/catalog/tyre-572-21-wormd...
I don't know if available in your size. Goodyear Wrangler Duratracs are very nice and OEM on several vehicles including Jeeps. And will do exactly what you are after.
Maxxis offer a similar looking tread to the BFG, but is usually cheaper and still very capable. Not 100% the size you where after, but pretty close.
https://www.maxxis.co.uk/catalog/tyre-572-21-wormd...
I fitted a set of GO15 yokos to my land cruiser.
They actually came from a seller in Italy, and were the cheapest set on eBay because they were new stock but a couple of years old.
Really pleased with them - they replaced Michelin/budget road tyres, but they’re just as quiet, handle better because they stop the sidewall roll that was very apparent with the original tyres, and on snow/ice they were brilliant, no problems with braking or direction changes. No obvious signs of wear yet, covered maybe 5,000 miles.
Impressed, but I haven’t tried the other options you’re considering.
They actually came from a seller in Italy, and were the cheapest set on eBay because they were new stock but a couple of years old.
Really pleased with them - they replaced Michelin/budget road tyres, but they’re just as quiet, handle better because they stop the sidewall roll that was very apparent with the original tyres, and on snow/ice they were brilliant, no problems with braking or direction changes. No obvious signs of wear yet, covered maybe 5,000 miles.
Impressed, but I haven’t tried the other options you’re considering.
I was recently looking for a pair of fronts for my Discovery 2. Considered BFG All Terrains, but cheapest I found was circa £115 each on Tyre Leader. I then remember hearing good reports about the Cooper Discoverer, some years back, so I went for a pair of these. They were only circa £68 each. Just driven the length of France etc and back. Been through torrential rain on the motorway, a short gravel trail oh and some very claggy chalky mud on the Somme and I am very pleased with them. I have a pair of old, obscure A/T brand on the rear, that the previous owner bought used. They seem to be pretty good. When they need replacing il either try to find another pair, or go for a pair of BFG All Terrains, to give it a bit more bite @ the rear, for the odd times that it sees mud.
I went with the KO2’s and am really pleased with them. Particularly that they seem fine for general road use, not noticeably noisier or harsher than the OE Duellers. I fitted them to the stock setup and they seemed fine - no rubbling at full lock. I could see they were pretty tight though so have subsequently fitted a Teraflex levelling kit (2” front, 1” rear) and a set of 25mm hub-centric spacers (also Teraflex). I now have plenty of clearance all round, and the handling (such as it is!) hasn’t been adversely affected. I’m very happy with the setup and would recommend it without reservation.
Edited by WindyCommon on Tuesday 3rd March 20:17
I put Falken Wildpeak AT3s on my Grand Cherokee a few weeks ago. They are more road-biased than a number of other AT tyres. BFG and Cooper are definitely more aggressive in their tread patterns. The Goodyear ATs are similar to the Falken ATs, used to have Goodyears on my wife's Wrangler.
Gassing Station | Off Road | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff