Something I’ve been wondering for a while. I have Sailun tires on my 78, and my car came with Ironman tires. Cheaper brands, no doubt. But I’m the last few weeks, I’ve noticed 18 wheelers at work running sailun and Ironman tires. Now, I’m my opinion, that means these tire companies know what they’re doing. I may be wrong, but at least that’s the impression I get. Of course, we all remember the Firestone fiasco with the Ford Expedition. What do y’all think? Are big name tires like Michelin, General, and BFGoodrich worth the extra cash?
As you may know I spent a lot of years working at tire stores so I'll give you my take on all of them.
Ironman tires are the bottom of the barrel. The manufacture believes in them so little that they do not come with tread life expectation or tread life warranty. They do come with a defect manufacture defect warranty. When I'd buy them wholesale they were always cheaper than all other brand, we did not stock them but would order them for certain customers who only wanted the cheapest thing they could get. If someone wanted 4 I'd order 5 so I could send one back if one of them was out of round and frequently that was the case. I would recommend buy used tires before Ironman.
I worked for Firestone for a lot of year and though the recall years. The biggest problem with that scenario was that the trucks had a inflation recommendation of 26psi. If not kept in check the pressure would drop into the teens over time, and a blow out on the top heave explorer meant a roll over if the driver didn't know how to handle it. We'd put a new set of tires on the truck and new inflation sticker on the door recommending 32psi. Ford did not like that because it meant the trucks rode rougher.
Most of my carrier was first with Firestone and later Goodyear. At Firestone (setting aside the recall) we'd warranty maybe a dozen tires a year for things like tread separation or pulling. At Goodyear we'd warranty probably a dozen a month. Goodyear does not manufacture their tires to a tight of standards creating more issues. Eventually I had a hard time believing in Goodyears tires and that in part was why I left the company. I just could work for a company I didn't think was make a quality product. Both Goodyear and Firestone manufacture tires for big rigs BTW. Firestone still makes some hard to find sizes such as 16.5.
I think with Michelin your paying for the name, but I have never worked somewhere that sold Michelin so I really can't comment further than that.
BFG VS General. I'm a General guy. I've got General Grabber AT's on all my rigs and here is why. Back in the late 90's I got my first pickup and put BFG All terrain T/A s on it. They did good off road, were a bit noisy and where terrible on compact snow and ice. I wore them out and installed set of General Grabber AT's because they were about $25 cheaper per tire. They were just as good off road, were a little quieter and during the first snow they really shown though. I thought I'd have to chain up to get up my hill but the grabbers drove though. I've been a Grabber fan ever since.
Hopefully that helps.