Remoat
Full Access Member
Ill give you my 2 cents in spring.
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Having lived in snow country for half my life and having always driven AWD and 4WD vehicles, there is NO REASON for studs. I lived in Tahoe...we had 30-60 feet of snow every winter. Studs are for ice...useless in snow.
MT tires are useless in snow. You need siping.
You need a solid AT tire with 3 mountain rating for deep snow. In some areas, that’s a legal requirement even with AWD and 4WD. In some areas an M&S rating is an absolute legal requirement and highway patrol can and will turn you back if you don’t have chains on non M&S tires.
Toyo/Nitto (same company) make terrific 3 mountain AT tires.
If you really want to go with a Hybrid tire, thought I don’t have experience with this tire, I understand that the Nitto Ridge Grappler is supposed to be pretty good in light/moderate snow. There’s quite a bit written about this.
Studded seems a bit overkill in a 4x4 truck.
Im pretty happy with Duratracs
I'm in northern Alberta and get extreme cold and icy roads. Proper studded winter tires are the best choice here. I have Nokian LT3s on my Raptor. I have had both studded Duratracs and LT2s on my previous truck and the LT2s were significantly better on road. If you are only concerned about a few dumps of snow and don't care about extreme temperatures or ice the Duratracs are a solid choice (they do have issues with balancing though).
I used the older BFG A/T in Colorado on my 89 Toyota xtra cab and only had a issue once but that was on a iced over freeway bridge in Wyoming.I’m curious as to what your gripes were with the KO2 in snow, as this has been a concern of mine and I have no experience with them. I’ve always run mud terrains through the winter, most recently the Cooper STT pros. I’ve been considering switching them out, but everyone seems to swear that KO2s are great in the snow.