What do you all get on a set of tires with you tundras? I have nittos on mine. Second pair 115,000 miles with decent amount of tread left. I always thought 65-70 was good for a set of tires.
What do you all get on a set of tires with you tundras? I have nittos on mine. Second pair 115,000 miles with decent amount of tread left. I always thought 65-70 was good for a set of tires.
2015 4wd tundra with 105,000 miles, just put third set on. 50,000+ roughly out of each of the first two sets. Got 70-80k out of tires on my old z71 4x4
I buy new ones when they look tired. I had Toyota put on BFGs when I set mine up, they werent large enough.. so after like 20 thousand I put on Toyo MTs, they're starting to look tired again at close to 40. I'm not sure what I'll put on next yet.. some mud terrain. I don't care that much about the ride. It's a truck, plus I don't get it above 60 very often.
Last edited by Highstrung; 09-20-2021 at 07:57 PM.
Love the interior.
Not too keen on the exterior, yet.
Looks like a "Chevy Raptor," if that makes any sense...
Sent from my SM-G965U1 using Tapatalk
I don't like cockpits in trucks. I like a full front bench seat. And its gotta have a V8.......However to each his own.
Chevy and Toyota having a competition to see who can have the most metro looking truck, for the new aged man.
"The best things in life make you sweaty"
- Edgar Allen Poe
“We need the tonic of wildness...At the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things, we require that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be indefinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us...”
― Henry David Thoreau
No v8 option
"And ignoring people on here....that's like being home schooled. Just say you're not ready to face life." Highstrung
I don't pay too much attention to the looks right off the bat. Between the looks growing on you and them getting some tweaks the first few years, most of the time they end up looking pretty good. I've always thought Chevy's were the best looking but the newest models looked like abominations to begin with, now I like the way they look. Doesn't really matter to me though because I'd never spend anywhere near what a new truck costs.
I got 60k on a set of ridge grapplers and have about 40 on a set of toyo at2s now with at least 20 in them. What happened with your 16?
Edit: I read a little further. I don’t own as many trucks as you do, did. I feel like a tundra is the most reliable truck for the every day guy. Based on the trucks I’ve had in the past my tundra has cost me much less money. It could bend a rod tomorrow but so far all I do is change the oil and put gas in it. Hell the tires get rotated ever 20k if they are lucky.
Last edited by SCswampCAT; 09-20-2021 at 10:25 PM.
How does a truck affect tire wear? Sorry if this is a stupid question. If it's aligned it's aligned right?
I have a 2019 and your numbers are way off from what I experience. One my tundra was cheaper than any other competitor. If I would have gotten the same amenities in a Ford it would have cost me 5k more. I also average right at 16 miles to the gallon which is more than I got from my 2013 ecoboost.
Overdid
Does it come with wifi and are there different flat screen options like can I get a truck without the flat screen?
“Duck hunting gives a man a chance to see the loneliest places …blinds washed by a rolling surf, blue and gold autumn marshes, …a rice field in the rain, flooded pin-oak forests or any remote river delta. In duck hunting the scene is as important as the shooting.” ~ Erwin Bauer, The Duck Hunter’s Bible, 1965
I will have one. With turbos
Seeing these soulless vanilla ice lookin Yankees on a bassboat is worse than watching a woman get her implants taken out. It's just wrong. Get back in your Lund and go back to infisherman.
Can I get an airbrushed picture of me on the tailgate singing lead in a Skynnard cover band with big ol giant angel wings on my back?
“Duck hunting gives a man a chance to see the loneliest places …blinds washed by a rolling surf, blue and gold autumn marshes, …a rice field in the rain, flooded pin-oak forests or any remote river delta. In duck hunting the scene is as important as the shooting.” ~ Erwin Bauer, The Duck Hunter’s Bible, 1965
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