siringo
Member
I don't know if the tyres play that much of a part in it.
Do mud tyres have more rolling resistance than the almost street tyres the Navara's come out with stock? I'm having trouble saying yes. For example, you lock up your rear diff with a locker of some type then turn full lock and see which tyres give you more resistance to the turn, it'll be the street tyres. That tells me that mud tyres offer less rolling resistance (pls don't reply with 'but that's only on full lock blah blah blah), why? Because there is more rubber in contact with the road trying to resist the turn.
The tyres aren't any wider than the stock street tyres the thing came out with. Stock tyres were 255/65, muds are 285/75, yep, the number is bigger, but the mud tyres sidewall is MUCH stiffer, the only rubber on the road are the tread blocks, there is bugger all bulge, unlike the street tyre.
The mud tyres have individual blocks of tread that contact the road, the street tyres have an almost constant block of tread that contacts the road.
The 285 is taller, but it also lets the car sit on a set speed at lower revs. I'm no mechanic, but I'm pretty sure the lower revs would equate to less fuel being pumped into the motor.
The 285's are heavier, this could be where extra fuel is burnt in turning the things from a stop to a roll.
Do mud tyres have more rolling resistance than the almost street tyres the Navara's come out with stock? I'm having trouble saying yes. For example, you lock up your rear diff with a locker of some type then turn full lock and see which tyres give you more resistance to the turn, it'll be the street tyres. That tells me that mud tyres offer less rolling resistance (pls don't reply with 'but that's only on full lock blah blah blah), why? Because there is more rubber in contact with the road trying to resist the turn.
The tyres aren't any wider than the stock street tyres the thing came out with. Stock tyres were 255/65, muds are 285/75, yep, the number is bigger, but the mud tyres sidewall is MUCH stiffer, the only rubber on the road are the tread blocks, there is bugger all bulge, unlike the street tyre.
The mud tyres have individual blocks of tread that contact the road, the street tyres have an almost constant block of tread that contacts the road.
The 285 is taller, but it also lets the car sit on a set speed at lower revs. I'm no mechanic, but I'm pretty sure the lower revs would equate to less fuel being pumped into the motor.
The 285's are heavier, this could be where extra fuel is burnt in turning the things from a stop to a roll.