azjl#3
Well-Known Member
(The E myth. The side wall is not a stiff spring.
I run my 37's at 35 PSI, air has more to do with it. Off road 15 front, 10 in rear (until my bead locks go on), very smooth ride. Getting 33x12.5R17 E rated K02's for the TJR.
Spoken like a true mall crawler. E's are far superior off road, you won't blow the sidewall so easily. In my KoH crazy days, I blew 5 C rated tires in sharp rocks going thru the tread (at stupid speeds). Switched to E and the problem went away.)
We might be talking around the same thing but here ya go:
Fact: E rated sidewalls are stiffer, to carry more load, period. I don't know who calls it a stiff spring, but by design, the wall is thicker, more layers, so it is stiffer.
Fact: E rated tires weigh a heck of a lot more, more rotational mass, worse gas mileage, worse stopping capability.
Fact: E rated tires are known to result in a stiffer ride, period. Now, this really happens because we do not load our E rated up like an F350 does. So in one respect you are correct, but you need to be at the same percentage of rated load as say a C or D rated tire to give you the same ride feel. If not, like most jeeps, it will give a stiffer ride. There is also a relation of lift, shocks, suspension setup, but generally, a stock jeep with E rated will ride much stiffer even if aired down to a good ride patch on the tread.
Fact: an E rated tire is a better offroad and load carrying tire because of the extra material in the carcass.
I had E Toyos on my 2dr, unless I aired down around town to 22psi, it bucked and bounced all over the road. Crappy accel and stopping as well seeing as each weighed about 100lbs. I then had D rated and it was smooth as silk, and I didn't give up anything on sidewall protection, because of my jeep weight vs sidewall rating.
(Why the obsession with a few pounds. It's the mass of the entire vehicle that counts.)
Untrue, rotational mass is what eats up your torque on accel and takes you longer to stop, because you are not stopping just a vehicle, you are stopping a spinning mass. Mass squared is the math on why a heavier tires are not always a goods thing. So that little bit of weight as you call it, an extra 50lbs per tire, ends up being 2500lbs of mass squared times 4=10,000lbs, times the moment arm times.
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