any experience with the kr3 on wet assphalt? i will likely run into rainy wet roads often and have family in the truck. Basically will they turn into skid on ice, or just not so performant?
you just can't drive a truck on 40s like a nissan altima. it really isn't any different than having to be careful on pavement when you're running a spool. If you put your foot into it when turning, in the rain, you better be prepared for the rear end to step out. you'll still have grip, but the rear of the truck will break traction. The colder the tires, the colder the ambient temps and the greater the amount of rain, the worse it will get.
The tires are also bias ply and will flat spot when they sit too long. It takes a good 5-10 miles for them to get up to operating temp.
Do they grip like a DOT tire cold, wet roads? No, it is a race tire.
Will they work on a true daily driver? No. ( They aren't designed to heat cycle that many times and the compound will get more brittle more quickly when compared to a DOT tire.)
hell, the Dakar compound behaves opposite to most other tires on the market. They are sticky when cold, and get harder when warm. ( so they behave like paddles in sand when hot)
at the end of the day, it is a race tire, not designed or tested for road duty. It has its quirks if you try to use it for what it wasn't designed for.
That being said, I have driven thousands of miles on-road on KR3s with no more than 25PSI in the tires at any time. I have driven sustained speeds up to 130ish both on pavement and in the dirt. I haven't had a single issue with them.
I haven't found another tire that I like more. If you put them on and hate them, don't paint me as the devil, I'm just sharing my experience.
If all of that scares you, I'd probably run a Goodyear MTR in 40. they Are DOT and more of crawler tire, but they'll hold up just fine.
The Toyos are HEAVYYYYYY. a 37x13.50r17 Toyo Open Country M/T is a good 8 lbs heavier than a BFG KR3 40x12.5r17. I don't want to know what a 40 weighs. ( I have the toyos on my super duty).
Running 40s on a raptor that is going to retain 4wd will limit your gear ration choices ( at least the wiser options). I would recommend going to 4.88 ( no deeper) if you retain 4wd. If you are going 2wd, I'd recommend 5.13s.