They are total, complete, utter garbage.ka wrote:has anyone had any experience with the tsl/thornbirds? the description (written by the sales dept) sounds great.
Seriously. You'd be better off with any other tire.
Moderator: TechMOGogy
They are total, complete, utter garbage.ka wrote:has anyone had any experience with the tsl/thornbirds? the description (written by the sales dept) sounds great.
if you are in snow and on ice I cannot imagine a worse tire choice.
The thornchickens, or thorn turds, fail to preform anywhere as far as im concerned. Ive seen them get clogged almost as soon as they hit the mud.
Thornbirds suck for any terrain, even on road as they get louder than boggers over time - they ride like poop as well, alot worse than you'd expect an "AT" to ride. Basically they're poser tires as they do look good, but that's about it.
The only time I saw Thornbirds grab was when a guy got sideways going up a hill that everyone with normal tires got straight up... he went right over on his lid. Them side lugs will grab when they finally slide into something.
I actually owned a set of T-Turds. Got a deal on a set of almost new 33s. Shoulda wondered why they were such a good price. By the time I got to the first trail head, I hated them. Hated them worse by the time I had slid, spun, and basically bashed my way up a trail I had run without incident with bald 33x9.50 BFG MTs. The only saving grace of T-Turds is rutted trail. They can climb out of ruts like nobody's business, and if you can get the side of them against something you can claw your way forward or back.
I had them siped and even wet pavement was spooky. They grab lines in the road and will drive YOU. My bronco is very street friendly, and it drove like herding cats.
Snow, ice, wet clay, and dirt with spit on it are all good places to hate these tires. God forbid that you piss in front of your tire and try to drive forward.
I actually felt bad when I sold these tires for a small loss instead of cutting them up to use as pushbar material.
Enough said?
Thornbird / turds' SUCK. I notice that the only ppl who really use them are rednecks who don't know poop about trucks. My buddy had a set on his 2000 Dodge 2500 4x4 v-10 turck. He had the worst luck in the world with those things. I used to think they looked kinda badass but after seeing them in the mud, god do they suck. They clog in like first 2 secs and all you can count on after that in mud is wheelspeed. Never seen them in the rocks or in sand. On the street, Ive seen them fall apart after being driven only about 3000 miles. They get hot real quick. The lugs are about the only good thing cuz they make climbin up the side of the truck a little easier to get poop outta the bed or for gettin under da hood. They should all be used for high school football practices. THORNBIRDS SUCK. PERIOD.
You have that size on a Pinz?Erik Maybee wrote:I have 33x12.50-17 i thaught they made a smaller tires 33x10-16
More stress on the wheel bearings, less tire clearance = more fender rubbing, increased steering effort, more mud all over the side of the truck.ka wrote:are there more of these wider rims around? how wide are they?
is there a down side?
Which tire? The Nitto's or the Super Swampers?ka wrote:i went thru 2 sets of those on a burban. most wonderful tire i've ever had (while they were new).
Never heard of them... But there are a lot of good "unknown brand" mud tires available. The challenging part is finding ones in the tall & skinny profile the Pinzgauer loves. The typical downside to the "unknown brand" tires is that they tend to have thinner sidewalls, more prone to sidewall punctures.ka wrote:my future pinz has mudstar 255. cheap and good, i hear.