Owners with 20 inch wheels.

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bMwdefector

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I got a deal I could not refuse on the Vorsteiner wheels and 35 1250 BFG AT's. While I would have gone with a different tire for the road, I am happy with the tires. I also had Deavers, drop shackles, bumpstops, and perch collars installed around the same time. They are a little wider than the stock wheels and the truck feels more agile. The Deavers really helped to plant the rear end. I have other toys to beat up off road if I am inclined and I still have the factory "beadlocks" should I want to get serious off-roading, which I won't for some time as this is a perfect daily driver for me. I may even sell the stocks and get some real beadlocks and more aggressive tires.

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deavers and collars.jpg

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ameration

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First off, the wheel size has nothing to do with power loss. It may feel as though you have less power going with a larger TIRE outside diameter as the tire needs to spin more times to equal the same revolutions, but again this has nothing to do with any power loss.

To answer your questions, I have 35x12.50R20 Mastercraft Courser MXT Mud Terrain tires on them. I just bought these for my previous truck and they only had about 1,500 miles on them. Are there better MT or AT tires out there? Yes, but for the low weight and low cost these were an easy choice for me. Handling is the same but a Mud Terrain tire with the very aggressive lugs does behave a little different - but I have only had MT's on my trucks for the past 15+ years so I'm used to it.

The "17" or you only drive to Starbucks" crowd needs to get over themselves. The 35x12.50R20 tires are pretty much same outside diameter as stock. The change in sidewall will not be noticeable unless you are really lowering the air pressure for serious off-roading. If you plan to do this, then keep your stock wheels and tires for the serious off-roading, but a 20" wheel with a 35" tire still leaves you with PLENTY of sidewall for almost any normal use - on and off-road (which more than covers what you mentioned above).

To clarify the weights: the VR-601 wheels weight 28.6 lbs. each, the stock wheel weighs 34.1 lbs each. The stock BFG KO2 tire weighs 64.53 lbs per the BFG website which makes the complete stock wheel and tire set up 98.63 lbs. each. The 35x12.50R20 Mastercraft Courser MXT weighs 65 lbs. (as an example, Nitto Trail Grapplers in the same size weight 77.84 lbs. each) for a total of 93.6 lbs. total on my truck. So compared to stock, my set up has a weight reduction of 5 lbs. for each wheel & tire. Add to the fact that rotational mass is more important that sprung weight and that savings of 20 lbs. is a good thing.
 

Edbert

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I think that when people mention "power loss" when speaking of larger wheel/tire combinations they speak of the parasitic loss caused by the added resistance/friction/momentum. These are all affected caused by weight or circumference or larger patch. Those factors are always real, the issue is how severe or benign they are and what have you done to compensate or overcome where (if?) needed.

35X20 vs 35X17 I see as a moot point unless one combo exceeds the other significantly in weight, 5 pounds per corner is not a big deal. Even if the 20s were 5 pounds heavier, the ability to upgrade the brakes would make it the way to go for me. Eventually (when the wallet recovers) you can get a small lift to clear a set of 37s and keep the rims.
 

Nick@Apollo-Optics

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Ok so the stock BFGoodrich tire weighs 63 lb’s, the 35/12.5r20 BFG weighs 66.8. Based on Ameration saying the Vorsteiner VR-601’s weighs less than stock wheel, could this setup weigh roughly the same? Or a bit less? Sidewall is still real damn good on the 20, could my ride be the same? Also no power loss? These are big concerns for me. Please shoot some holes in this and help me to understand it. Pretty new at this. With the exception of what I read on this site. My 19 is on order, and if this will work I will cancel the upgraded wheels and just go with the stock . He says I have about a week or so to make changes. Thanks a lot guys I’m learning a lot on this board

You're correct. We're running the 325/60/20 Nitto Ridge Grapplers which tip the scales at 69.2lbs each with the Vorsteiner 601 wheels. Going from the OEM non-beadlock wheels to the Vorsteiners, you save 5.6 pounds at each corner. The factory 315/70/17 Load Range C K02 weighs 64.4lbs. So you add back 4.8 pounds per corner with the Nittos. Overall, you lose 0.8lbs per corner and effectively stay at stock wheel tire weight while adding a bigger, beefier tire and a larger wheel.

We'd be happy to help put a setup together for you on your 2019 when it arrives. Please let me know if we can help.
 

Todd458

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I got a deal I could not refuse on the Vorsteiner wheels and 35 1250 BFG AT's. While I would have gone with a different tire for the road, I am happy with the tires. I also had Deavers, drop shackles, bumpstops, and perch collars installed around the same time. They are a little wider than the stock wheels and the truck feels more agile. The Deavers really helped to plant the rear end. I have other toys to beat up off road if I am inclined and I still have the factory "beadlocks" should I want to get serious off-roading, which I won't for some time as this is a perfect daily driver for me. I may even sell the stocks and get some real beadlocks and more aggressive tires.

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Great looking set up! Leaning heavily to the exact same thing
 

Quaesta

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Is anyone aware of a 37” tire that has above a Q speed rating besides the Nitto Terra Grappler?
 
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