Good morning all,
For those considering the Falken Wildpeak AT3W for their Gen 2 Raptor—here is a 5000 mile update:
-Beginning Mileage: 30400 mi, new, installed by CarMax; 5 tires (they swapped my spare for an AT3W)
-Current Mileage: 35488 mi, (rotated/balanced by Ford Dealer during oil/filter service). 4 tire rotation.
-315/70R 17 Load Range E
-Consistently running 37F & 35R (checked bi-weekly, adjusted for wide range of temps 20 deg—90 degrees in TX, CO, NM, Mexico)
-Avg MPG (city, highway, mostly pavement, some gravel/dirt, but my son did “borrow” it for about a month and did drive it a lot in CO). TOTAL MPG per vehicle computer: 16.6mpg. HWY MPG: Approx 17.8 as I’ve reset and logged during our road trips because I was curious.
NOTE: The Raptor doesn’t haul anything heavier than me, my wife, our kids, and luggage at most—thus the lower tire pressure.
During our time of ownership, we’ve mostly used the Raptor for road trips between our homes, for vacations, and to visit our daughter in Austin. I’ve been using it to commute to/from work in heavy stop/go—simply because I enjoy driving it.
At the tire rotation, the service mgr (whom I respect) mentioned that it didn’t look as if the tires had worn one bit. Tread depth is still nearly as new—with even wear running 37F/35R
Subjectives: Quiet, comfortable likely due to lower pressure and suspension, MPGs seem fine—except for the time our son borrowed it for a month in CO where MPGs took a massive hit due to him driving around and trying to impress his girlfriend I imagine.
Bias: All of our SUVs/trucks have run Load Range E tires (ATs on wife’s Lexus LX, MTs on AEV Rubicon, and our Hybrid AT/MT on F250–which needs the E for towing). We run the tire pressure slightly lower in the Lexus and quite a bit lower in the Jeep due to weight unless loading it down.
Conclusion: I imagine the tires will continue to wear well with good ride comfort. When my wife’s SUV needs new tires—we are going with the AT3W. From my perspective—I can see why some OEMs are using this as a factory tire (even if they are “tailoring” it a bit for the OEM).
I’ll update at 10k. Betweeen my commuting, road trips, and my boy “borrowing”—they should be due for another rotation at 40k when I get the next oil/filter.
I hope this is useful and have a nice day.