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Which tyres for 90% sand driving??
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Which tyres for 90% sand driving??
I'm after some input on the most appropriate sand tyre for my Vitara.
I currently have 205/75/15's bridgestone HT's on the front & Kuhmo A/T's on the rear.
90% of my offroad driving will be on Stockton beach, which is notorious for soft sand, with the other 10% forest trails with hardly any mud driving.
I'm looking to chuck some 235/75/15's all round and are wondering what I should use???
I was all set to buy some AT's until I was talking to one of the local guys at Argy tyres and he recommended road tyres, as AT's will tend to dig into the sand more????
Road tyres???
AT's???
what do you guys think?
I currently have 205/75/15's bridgestone HT's on the front & Kuhmo A/T's on the rear.
90% of my offroad driving will be on Stockton beach, which is notorious for soft sand, with the other 10% forest trails with hardly any mud driving.
I'm looking to chuck some 235/75/15's all round and are wondering what I should use???
I was all set to buy some AT's until I was talking to one of the local guys at Argy tyres and he recommended road tyres, as AT's will tend to dig into the sand more????
Road tyres???
AT's???
what do you guys think?
last 200 times this thread was done, there was no clear cut answer. with some swearing blind that claws, and swampers were better than HT/AT's
But one thing everyone agrees on is THE DRIVER AND HIS RIGHT FOOT AND PRESSURES...
We used to get further out Kurnell sandhills in a HT 186 3 on tree (light weight - no glass, or bonnet/boot etc) than dozens of people in 4wds used to.. yea local knowledge, but 10psi and knowing where to drive and not to drive (reading conditions) helped



But one thing everyone agrees on is THE DRIVER AND HIS RIGHT FOOT AND PRESSURES...
We used to get further out Kurnell sandhills in a HT 186 3 on tree (light weight - no glass, or bonnet/boot etc) than dozens of people in 4wds used to.. yea local knowledge, but 10psi and knowing where to drive and not to drive (reading conditions) helped
Last edited by bogged on Fri Oct 20, 2006 1:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I agree there sand driving is easy when you air down rather than being a lazy hero ..bogged wrote:last 200 times this thread was done, there was no clear cut answer. with some swearing blind that claws, and swampers were better than HT/AT's![]()
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But one thing everyone agrees on is THE DRIVER AND HIS RIGHT FOOT AND PRESSURES...
We used to get further out Kurnell sandhills in a HT 186 3 on tree (light weight - no glass, or bonnet/boot etc) than dozens of people in 4wds used to.. yea local knowledge, but 10psi and knowing where to drive and not to drive (reading conditions) helped
My Bridgestone Dessert Duellers love the sand. IMO H/T's wont have enough 'bite', and I've been to stocko with 2 cruiser Utes, one with HT's and the other with muddies, and the muddies performed better where as the H/T's seemed to just gloss over the top of the sand an spin heaps without making the car go forward... YMMV and as mentioned its been done to death + each driver is different, but if i was doing alot of sand I'd be getting A/T's.
60 + Turbo, 33"s :armsup:
My MTRs go really well on the beach....
When coasting along you can really feel them biting in and causing some resistance, but when you need to get up a dune or drive out of someone else's ruts, they are really good. I run them at 12psi and haven't got stuck yet
My mate also has worn BFG muds, and they worked a treat also.
I agree with smoother treads not biting into the sand... Although they will be great for coasting along the flat stuff, but on really soft stuff or dunes the chunkier treads will prevail... of course with the right driving
When coasting along you can really feel them biting in and causing some resistance, but when you need to get up a dune or drive out of someone else's ruts, they are really good. I run them at 12psi and haven't got stuck yet

My mate also has worn BFG muds, and they worked a treat also.
I agree with smoother treads not biting into the sand... Although they will be great for coasting along the flat stuff, but on really soft stuff or dunes the chunkier treads will prevail... of course with the right driving

[quote="RockyF70 - Coming out of the closet"]i'd be rushing out and buying an IFS rocky[/quote]
I do a fair bit of beach driving and i have run HT's for about a year and a half, then i ran BFG AT's for a year and a bit and now i've got MTR's.
I never got stuck on the HT's, it just powered on but often became a handful in sandy tracks and beach ruts but there was never any feeling of becoming stuck.
The AT's were great, they plugged along and made light work of the beach, but i got stuck towing a trailor once and they didn't flick enough of a rooster tail
The MTR's dig in if you give it too much when taking off but once you've got momentum, they're unstoppable. I've been stuck on an inland track at Fraser because i stopped then tried to take off on an incline.
I never got stuck on the HT's, it just powered on but often became a handful in sandy tracks and beach ruts but there was never any feeling of becoming stuck.
The AT's were great, they plugged along and made light work of the beach, but i got stuck towing a trailor once and they didn't flick enough of a rooster tail

The MTR's dig in if you give it too much when taking off but once you've got momentum, they're unstoppable. I've been stuck on an inland track at Fraser because i stopped then tried to take off on an incline.
So do any type of tyres... HT will spin on the spot and dig down, whereas the MTR dig in a bit, but also propel you forward as the traction is good.Jeeps wrote: The MTR's dig in if you give it too much when taking off.
[quote="RockyF70 - Coming out of the closet"]i'd be rushing out and buying an IFS rocky[/quote]
Agreed, but the MTR's don't take off as easily from a standstill as my HT's, but i have to admit i tried to pull out a pajero & trailor with my BFG AT's a few years ago and got no-where and then a Hilux with 35" MTR's turned up and managed to get it out.HotFourOk wrote:So do any type of tyres... HT will spin on the spot and dig down, whereas the MTR dig in a bit, but also propel you forward as the traction is good.Jeeps wrote: The MTR's dig in if you give it too much when taking off.
I've used Maxxis A/T's, BFG Muddies and Bridgestone Desert Duelers in some pretty soft sand (south east SA coastline) all on the same car and the Duelers were the best, so are tyres pressures adjusted according to the softness of the sand.
There usually aint harder stuff down lower in dunes and beaches to bite on. Just more soft sand.I always thought that u needed a tyre that could be let down to a 20psi ish amount safely, and one that can dig through the soft sand to the harder stuff. i woulda thought a m/t would be the best.
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0400 250 734 Bordertown SA
I love terra firma-the less firma the more terra
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