Consult with your owner's manual to determine the best air pressure you should use for your vehicle. This does not represent the amount of air pressure your tires should have at all times. The maximum air pressure this tire will support. This number is directly related to the Load Index. Remember to multiply this number by the number of tires installed on your vehicle to get the maximum carrying capacity.
The grade for each of these can be found on the sidewall of your tire (except for winter tires and certain light truck tires). The UTQG rates tires are rated on their tread-wear, traction performance, and temperature resistance. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) created the Uniform Tire Quality Grading System (UTQG).
They are certainly going to last, with proper care and maintenance, the full 60,000 miles General Tire claims.To help consumers evaluate their tires, the U.S. That’s about $30 a tire less than a major competitor and equal if not better performance. ValueĪt $268.07 a tire, the Grabber ATX is a good deal. While some tires have you saying “WHAT?” whenever someone talks to you, the ATX is quieter than the factory all-terrains that came on the JL and have not picked up any noise with some wear. Short of a mud hole, or rocks in the wet, there isn’t anything I wouldn’t try with these tires. I also have not met a DOT tire that could tackle these conditions without some pucker factor. Only in saturated grass and slipper slopes do you have to be concerned with limited traction. Fire roads, county roads, and camping areas are where these will see the most action and they are stellar. These are mud tires and we aren’t rock crawling with them. Gravel, dirt, light mud, and other terrain are above average. If anything with some miles the tire is gripping better in the wet than when brand new. Overall traction continues to be excellent. Over or underinflating can really impact tire wear negatively. We also are very regimented in checking tire pressure and making seasonal adjustments to make sure we maintain the same cold tire pressure for the duration of testing. When testing we don’t do a 5 tire rotation, since not every vehicle can do a 5 tire rotation it’s important to show what the tire does versus what someone with an extra tire in the mix can get out of a set. It certainly seems like General’s 60,000-mile promise for the ATX is well within reach. The well used rear tires after 8000 miles were just slightly below the 13/32’s line and the fronts were a perfect 13/32’s of tread left. That pristine tire measured 14/32’s of tread at the wear bar. The spare has been our control tire and has never been used. Having racked up a little over 8000 miles since February I decided to check the overall wear of the tires. I would not have thought 20 years later that they would build some of the best off-road tires I have tested, and yet here we are. When I sold tires in the late 90’s General Tire made these super inexpensive rubber band tires that we sold at Montgomery Ward’s for about $20.