Badgertits
FRF Addict
The BFGs in CO may be OK b/c the air is drier the snow is more like “cold sand” vs. what we get in Midwest or northeast where things go from dumping 18” to a raining sleet to below 0 temps freezing everything up & then repeat the cycle- that’s where the BFGs will really not fair well, in hard packed snow & certainly ice, & in colder temps in general b/c the compound isn’t engineered for it (the BFG KO2 on factory raptors is not the same as off the shelf KO2s- which actually get a snowflake designation for winter duty)
FWIW I live in MA, drove my Raptor for 2nd 1/2 of Feb & March & could tell even then during the tail end of winter that the BFGs were serviceable but not ideal in winter conditions. I already spoiled myself previously running studded snows on a 2.5” lifted 4x4 GMC truck & wound up getting a set of Nokian studded snows in stock size to run this season.
To break it down in simple terms- you’ll be nearly unstoppable in a raptor on studded snows vs anything else in the winter- but part of what makes it good in winter conditions also hurts it when not equipped w/ the best tires- that being high ground clearance/big power/torque & all the different settings that may or may not make sense depending on the tire & conditions you run in.
You don’t need weight in the bed if you run snow tires & I wouldn’t recommend doing it anyhow in a raptor b/c of the soft suspension - the kinda weight you’d need to add to really “feel” a difference is 250 lbs+ & that alone is more than 20% of max payload to begin with.
Engine block heater isn’t a bad idea if you’re in extreme low temps for extended periods. Chains I see in use a lot more when I travel out west for skiing- good idea but as other mentioned tough on clearance for the front unless suspension is modified. Studded snows are better overall best of both worlds.
I’ll leave you w/ this- if I was transporting my family in bad winter conditions & had to choose between my old modified RWD V8 Pontiac G8 GT on studded blizzaks vs. a 4x4 pickup on crappy fleet vehicle “all season” or “all terrain” tires I’m
Taking my old sport sedan on studded snows that had the additional benefit of 50/50 weight distribution, narrower footprint, and mechanical limited slip.
FWIW I live in MA, drove my Raptor for 2nd 1/2 of Feb & March & could tell even then during the tail end of winter that the BFGs were serviceable but not ideal in winter conditions. I already spoiled myself previously running studded snows on a 2.5” lifted 4x4 GMC truck & wound up getting a set of Nokian studded snows in stock size to run this season.
To break it down in simple terms- you’ll be nearly unstoppable in a raptor on studded snows vs anything else in the winter- but part of what makes it good in winter conditions also hurts it when not equipped w/ the best tires- that being high ground clearance/big power/torque & all the different settings that may or may not make sense depending on the tire & conditions you run in.
You don’t need weight in the bed if you run snow tires & I wouldn’t recommend doing it anyhow in a raptor b/c of the soft suspension - the kinda weight you’d need to add to really “feel” a difference is 250 lbs+ & that alone is more than 20% of max payload to begin with.
Engine block heater isn’t a bad idea if you’re in extreme low temps for extended periods. Chains I see in use a lot more when I travel out west for skiing- good idea but as other mentioned tough on clearance for the front unless suspension is modified. Studded snows are better overall best of both worlds.
I’ll leave you w/ this- if I was transporting my family in bad winter conditions & had to choose between my old modified RWD V8 Pontiac G8 GT on studded blizzaks vs. a 4x4 pickup on crappy fleet vehicle “all season” or “all terrain” tires I’m
Taking my old sport sedan on studded snows that had the additional benefit of 50/50 weight distribution, narrower footprint, and mechanical limited slip.