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Home > Wheels & Tyres > BFG AT KO2 285/65R20 |
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naks Member Since: 15 Jul 2016 Location: Stellenbosch Posts: 1169 |
Hi everyone,
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Sun Jan 08 2023 10:42am |
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naks Member Since: 15 Jul 2016 Location: Stellenbosch Posts: 1169 |
anyone? --
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Mon Jan 09 2023 4:12pm |
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naks Member Since: 15 Jul 2016 Location: Stellenbosch Posts: 1169 |
Yeah, I figured as much.
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Tue Jan 10 2023 7:04am |
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RRSTDV8 Member Since: 12 Aug 2011 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 8985 |
That's only half an inch which you should be able to check by applying full lock when in access mode. You might need access to a friendly garage with a ramp to get a good look, of course, as when it's hunkered down on its belly you'll struggle to see and measure the inside otherwise. 2012 SDV6 - it's missing a couple of cylinders
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Tue Jan 10 2023 9:05am |
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TheWojtek Member Since: 08 May 2015 Location: Poznań, Poland Posts: 737 |
After recalling my physics classes from back 30 years ago, if I was fighting for more grip and employed A/T tires for this very reason, I would rather use narrower tread to maximize traction. Regards etc., Wojtek --- WAS: 2006 RRS Supercharged IS: 2010 RRS TDV8 HSE |
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Tue Jan 10 2023 9:13am |
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Col Member Since: 02 Sep 2012 Location: Hawkes Bay NZ Posts: 4981 |
If driving off road on sand or soft ground would you not need a wider tyre rather than a narrower one to increase the footprint of the tyre to give it more traction and stop it sinking into the sand etc. Although deflating the tyres slightly I imagine would have a similar effect.
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Tue Jan 10 2023 8:58pm |
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TheWojtek Member Since: 08 May 2015 Location: Poznań, Poland Posts: 737 |
Good point.
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Tue Jan 10 2023 11:01pm |
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naks Member Since: 15 Jul 2016 Location: Stellenbosch Posts: 1169 |
No, counter-intuitively, as TheWojtek pointed out, a narrower & taller tyre will almost always outperform a wide & shorter one, especially on sand. You might think that the wider contact patch when deflating has to do with the width, but it's actually the elongation of the tyre itself that spreads the weight over a bigger surface (not sure if I'm explaining this well). When it comes to rock, you actually don't want too much sidewall bulge, as this increases the chances of a cut, and a longer tread 'catches' the next rock while you're still on the 'current' one. edit: this photo explains it better than I can -- 2010 Defender Puma 90 + BAS remap + Alive IC + Slickshift + Ashcroft ATB rear 2015 Range Rover Sport Supercharged V8 HSE Dynamic Defender Puma Workshop Manual: https://bit.ly/2zZ1en9 Discovery 4 Workshop Manual: https://bit.ly/2zXrtKO Range Rover/Sport L320/L322/L494 Workshop Manual: https://bit.ly/2zc58JQ |
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Wed Jan 11 2023 7:16am |
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Grimble Member Since: 21 Aug 2020 Location: Staffordshire Posts: 257 |
A picture is worth a thousand words! RRS HSE Dynamic SDV6 2014
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Wed Jan 11 2023 9:50am |
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naks Member Since: 15 Jul 2016 Location: Stellenbosch Posts: 1169 |
this chap fitted 275/55 KO2s, no rubbing.
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Thu Jan 12 2023 4:07pm |
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mike54 Member Since: 19 Dec 2020 Location: NW Posts: 23 |
Naks is right, contact patch is measured in length not width. the more you air down, the greater your lenghwise contact patch. side-wise makes sense if you think about it, but is factually not correct. |
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Sun Jan 29 2023 4:22pm |
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RainHard Member Since: 07 Sep 2013 Location: Lonehill Posts: 20 |
No way (in my opinion) would 285/65 R20 (879mm dia) fit. Max 275/55 R20 (811mm dia) - just!. But I have a RRS MY 2010 so could be completely incorrect. |
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Wed Mar 08 2023 7:46pm |
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