Finally someone who knows what they are talking about and has some common sense. Thank you.
I guess there is a reason why my friends LX 570 with Nokkia snow tires blows my raptor away in the snow.
I am coming from a ‘15 GMC Sierra 6.2 w/ 4x4 which I ran 33” general grabber arctic studded snows 275/60r20
The BFG KO2s are decent in winter weather & better than and all season & probably one of the best “all terrain” tires in winter weather.
All that being said- as I’ve mentioned on countless forums since I always run snows on my vehicle whether it’s a RWD sport sedan, 2wd beater truck or a monster like the raptor- there is NOTHING that comes close to running studded snows on a lifted 4x4 truck. You quite literally can drive through snow/ice packed blizzard ridden roads like it’s normal out. When you’re taking a turn in the raptor in 4hi on packed/icy snow even at slow speeds on the stock tires sometimes you'll steer & the wheels will turn but the truck doesn’t, then you gotta give some throttle to get the front wheels grabbing, but w/ a truck w/ so much power like the raptor the next thing you’re doing is jacking the wheel in the other direction to over correct.
I will be getting studded snows on my raptor next year, gonna Be awesome- 4wd drift this ****** all over the place. Passing highway plows @ 60 in 4hi mid blizzard like a boss.
If you haven’t driven a truck or a “real” AWD car like an Audi or subie w/ snows/studded snows then don’t bother w/ a stupid ignorant comment cuz you have no idea what I’m talking about.
To put in perspective however the difference/delta in performance between all season/all terrain tires vs. dedicated snows is greater (significantly so IMO) than the difference between using slicks or DRs @ the track in a vette vs. “all seasons” or “performance summer” tires.
Food for thought.