NJRadioGuy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Peter
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2023
- Threads
- 46
- Messages
- 310
- Reaction score
- 219
- Location
- Northern NJ
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 JL Unlimited Rubicon
- Occupation
- Gentleman of Leisure
- Thread starter
- #1
Hi all,
'22 JLUR here, and it's time to move on from the stock Rubicon wheels. I'm running them with 1.5" spacers and a 2" Clayton lift kit. I'm running 315/70R17 Falken Wildpeaks for now, about 25% worn, so I likely won't be changing tires for a few more years--although 37s are definitely in my future.
I was almost ready to pull the trigger on a set of Method Beadgrip 709s this afternoon, but when I was up at the shop that does all my work they warned me that nobody will be able to dismount a tire from beadgrip rims, and that I should go genuine beadlocks instead. Their techs refuse to work on Method Beadgrips, and the only way they remove them is with a sawzall. So I'm now genuinely curious about my best course of action here. If a dedicated 4x4 shop can't dismount tires from these things, how's a local tire shop supposed to deal with them if I were to have a problem away from home?
I go to Canada at least once or twice a year, and my understanding is real beadlocks are illegal up there. And even US DOT-approved beadlocks might get me some unwanted attention from a trooper with a summons quota to fill. "Tell it to the judge" is a lot of hassle when you're 4 days and a border crossing away from home! And I simply wouldn't trust local shops to mess with beadlocks, full-stop.
I like to wheel at 10-12 PSI on rock and sand. And like I said, I'm planning to go to 37s once these Falkens are more than 50% worn.
What are your experiences with beadgrips? Should I just go for it? Or maybe an option I'm not thinking of? Whatever I get I want to protect the rims from rock rash. Please and thanks.
'22 JLUR here, and it's time to move on from the stock Rubicon wheels. I'm running them with 1.5" spacers and a 2" Clayton lift kit. I'm running 315/70R17 Falken Wildpeaks for now, about 25% worn, so I likely won't be changing tires for a few more years--although 37s are definitely in my future.
I was almost ready to pull the trigger on a set of Method Beadgrip 709s this afternoon, but when I was up at the shop that does all my work they warned me that nobody will be able to dismount a tire from beadgrip rims, and that I should go genuine beadlocks instead. Their techs refuse to work on Method Beadgrips, and the only way they remove them is with a sawzall. So I'm now genuinely curious about my best course of action here. If a dedicated 4x4 shop can't dismount tires from these things, how's a local tire shop supposed to deal with them if I were to have a problem away from home?
I go to Canada at least once or twice a year, and my understanding is real beadlocks are illegal up there. And even US DOT-approved beadlocks might get me some unwanted attention from a trooper with a summons quota to fill. "Tell it to the judge" is a lot of hassle when you're 4 days and a border crossing away from home! And I simply wouldn't trust local shops to mess with beadlocks, full-stop.
I like to wheel at 10-12 PSI on rock and sand. And like I said, I'm planning to go to 37s once these Falkens are more than 50% worn.
What are your experiences with beadgrips? Should I just go for it? Or maybe an option I'm not thinking of? Whatever I get I want to protect the rims from rock rash. Please and thanks.
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