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Post Info TOPIC: Michelin LTX M/S2 vs. Michelin LTX A/T2


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Michelin LTX M/S2 vs. Michelin LTX A/T2


I looked through all the posts on tires and all I see are comments about liking one or the other of these Michelin tires but no comparisons. I'd like to hear details in which of these tires are better overall for the full time towing we do. We do have a 4X4 dually and do some off road exploring so I'm leaning to the LTX A/T2 for the more aggressive tread pattern. But since we only off road occasionally vs. towing 85% of the time I'm really interested to know if the M/S2's would be the better over all tire? Michelin has the tread life for the M/S 2 @ 70,000 miles and the A/T2 rated @ 60,000 miles so that's why I wondering which would be the better overall tire? Price is about the same per tire.

Steve Mc



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Debbie & Steve McCormack...and Hurley too!

Our Blog: Down the Road

2013 Montana 3582RL

2013 Dodge 3500HD Laramie Longhorn Dually

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Two sets of MS2's here and there WILL be a third!!!

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2015 RAM/Cummins/Aisin/4.10's/3500Dually

2016 Mobile Suites 39TKSB3 "Highly Elited"

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It really comes down to you and what you are willing to compromise. There is no perfect tire, just a tire that meets most of your needs. The MS2 will provide excellent wet weather traction, a smooth quiet ride, less rocks picked up and thrown back. The AT will provide increased off road and snow traction, better traction in most loose soil conditions, have a louder tire noise level.

You just need to decide what attributes you can't live without and which ones you can let go. I outlined just a few of the attributes per tire that may be of interest to you.

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2015 Ram 3500 6.7L DRW



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Thank You Rickl and Cummins12V98!  That's great insight, I had heard the the A/T2 pick up and throw rocks and they are louder on the road. So this has really help me sway to the M/S 2's, plus the longer OEM rated tread life. Since we only boondock and off road occasionally I think the M/S 2's will be best overall for our needs.



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Debbie & Steve McCormack...and Hurley too!

Our Blog: Down the Road

2013 Montana 3582RL

2013 Dodge 3500HD Laramie Longhorn Dually

Fulltime since June 2014



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DebbieM wrote:

Thank You Rickl and Cummins12V98!  That's great insight, I had heard the the A/T2 pick up and throw rocks and they are louder on the road. So this has really help me sway to the M/S 2's, plus the longer OEM rated tread life. Since we only boondock and off road occasionally I think the M/S 2's will be best overall for our needs.


 You are welcome!

 

These were on my 11 HO RAM Dually.  40K with only side to side rotation on front tires every 15K keeping rotation the same.  Run 80psi all the time front.  35 solo and 65 towing with 5,500# pin weight.

 

 



-- Edited by Cummins12V98 on Sunday 29th of May 2016 05:05:35 AM

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2015 RAM/Cummins/Aisin/4.10's/3500Dually

2016 Mobile Suites 39TKSB3 "Highly Elited"

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Thank You, and your tire look excellent with 40K on them. So you never do the 6 tire rotation, just rotating the tires side to side in front and rear? I know that's what the tire shops want to do, but I pushed them once to rotate the six ways to get rear tires to the front. Wasn't sure if it made any difference. 

 

We did get the LTX M/S 2's Friday, and as you mentioned they sure are smooth riding and quiet. It's a bit early to tell but on the first tank of gas we got 1.5 miles to the gallon better than before the new tires(based on the computers reading of average mpg). That's without the trailer of course so time will tell, but so far so good.

 

Thanks again for your insight and advice Cummins12V98!  Have safe travels!



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Debbie & Steve McCormack...and Hurley too!

Our Blog: Down the Road

2013 Montana 3582RL

2013 Dodge 3500HD Laramie Longhorn Dually

Fulltime since June 2014



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The best rotation (with a re-balance preferably) is to X the front to the inside duals, the inner move to the outside rears, and then X (cross) the outside tire to the front. I would highly recommend the first rotation at 5,000' then the next at 7,500 (12,500 total). The first two really set the tone on how the tires wear in the future, plus if there is any irregular wear you'll more then likely catch it before the tires take a set wear pattern. Then keep your eye on the tires but you should then be able to go on a 15,000 schedule.



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I tried the X rotation and was very disappointed in the outcome. Tires from the rear always were rough on front. I started just moving fronts from one side to next.

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2003 Teton Grand Freedon  2006 Mobile Suites 32TK3 SOLD     2006 Freightliner Century 120 with Detroit 14L singled, ultrashift,  hauling a 2016 Smart Passion



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If you leave the tires in one position too long you will probably experience some irregularities in the ride. However if you rotate them the first time on somewhat a low mileage you will find you will have much better luck.

Think of a tire much like a new pencil. When you first use a pencil eraser it sheds a lot of material. But as you use the eraser more you find less shedding and the eraser doesn't flex as much. A new tire is very similar, you will wear off the first 2/32nds rather quickly then the wear slows down appreciably. I really think 3,500 miles is good for the first time (which I do) but having been in the tire industry 35+ years most people grimace when I tell them that as they don't really comprehend the reasoning behind the recommendation. Tell them 5,000 and they don't seem to have a problem with that.

Typically I get much more mileage out of my tires (most projected 100,000 miles plus) where many are only seeing maybe 75,000 - 80,000. I had 3 sets of Wranglers that all 3 went over 100,000 for projections. AT's, ATS's, and Aquatreds. Granted this was back in the 90's but tires have improved. Air pressure, alignment (making sure all front end components are within spec's for wear), consistent rotation and balancing go a long way in extending tire mileage. YMMV as to your driving and loads.

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HDT don't rotate. Even fleet trucks. No benefit.

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2003 Teton Grand Freedon  2006 Mobile Suites 32TK3 SOLD     2006 Freightliner Century 120 with Detroit 14L singled, ultrashift,  hauling a 2016 Smart Passion



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I respectfully disagree. More fleets are rotating now a days. With lighter frames and axles they are finding it to be one way to stop or slow irregular wear by rotating the rears. Plus they rotate the fronts side to side as when you move into the commercial truck segment there are axle specific tread compounds, steer, drive, and trailer. The more cutting edge fleet maintenance managers are even balancing all the axles, including trailers. The problem with the trailer tires are the amount they are getting beaten up on any given day so I think that is questionable at best.

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Rears stay where they are, no rotation. Fronts side to side same rotation.

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2016 Mobile Suites 39TKSB3 "Highly Elited"

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