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Ideal Tire setup on M35a2

4x4 Forever

Emerald Shellback
Steel Soldiers Supporter
I had my mind made up at one time and now I cannot decide and would like to pick minds and see about the options…

What I would like:
Larger sized tires than the 9.00x20.
Keep the trailering aspect of the beast.
Ease (relative) of changing tires by myself on the side of the road.
Availability of spares, not only around homebase but on the road as well.
The truck would be used as a travel vehicle, not just around town, possibly towing a fully loaded M105.

I had been set on the following: 11.00x20 (stock rims) on the back and 14.5x20 (or equivalent) on the front.

I have also been looking the MRAP wheels and 395/85R20.:drool::drool::drool:

Questions:

1. Has anyone done the MRAP/395 swap and towed with it after the swap?
2. What has the swap done to the powerband in regards to towing?
3. Other than looking REAL nice and better clearance, is there any OTHER reason to go with the MRAP/395 setup?
4. Is there any reason NOT to go with the 1100/14.5 combo?
5. Is there any other option in mounting the 14.5s on the front axle other than A3 or Custom rims? I’ve also read somewhere that A3 rims are not the way to go…
 

Flyingvan911

Well-known member
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63
Location
Kansas City, MO
If you use 11s on the rear and 14s on the front you won't be able to use the 6x6 or you'll blow something up. Several of my friends are using singled 11.00x20. They like it a lot. I am keeping my 10-9.00's for now.
 

jasonjc

Well-known member
5,326
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Location
Gravette Ar.
If you use 11s on the rear and 14s on the front you won't be able to use the 6x6 or you'll blow something up. Several of my friends are using singled 11.00x20. They like it a lot. I am keeping my 10-9.00's for now.

You are right in not using 14's , but he said 14.5's those will work. Like on my truck's I'm running 9.00's on the rear and 12.50's on the front. The .5 make them shorter.
 

eagle4g63

Well-known member
1,544
34
48
Location
North/west Indiana
With the 14.5 only being .3" larger in DIAMETER I don't think anything would notice it..............we are talking only about a 1/4"......again in diameter, tire wear would give more than that.

It would be the way I am thinking of doing it the next time around......instead of the 395's I have now.
 

4x4 Forever

Emerald Shellback
Steel Soldiers Supporter
The 14.5s and 1100x20s are close enough to almost be twins. I've seen several set up with this and thought it was the cats meow! I know I have had several civvy GMs with 4.11 on the rear and 4.10 in the front, no problems.

Thanks guys!
 

Castle Bravo

Hundredaire Socialite
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,964
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Location
Arizona
If I had kept my deuce (Or if I get another) I had planned on doing 10 11R20 tires, probably the common G177s that are on most of the M939 trucks now.

I like having 10 tires, as you effectively have 4 spares if you're not loaded too heavy, plus the 1100s aren't too heavy to deal with by yourself or too large to fit in the deuce's spare tire spot. The radial tires should wear a bit better than the bias ply tires, and they're still tubed, so you could carry extra tubes and tools and fix flats yourself, so long as you didn't tear the tire up too bad.

If you wanted complete get-em-anywhere availability, you'd need to go to something 11R22.5.
 

taylordc15

Member
249
3
18
Location
Sale Creek, TN
I am running the MRAP/395 combo, I love it, looks great and the truck runs 60 MPH on the highway. I have not towed anything with it yet but my truck is a couple of thousand lbs heavier than stock. It is not an easy task to change them on your own and I do have a pyro gauge and the fuel turned up in order to get those highway speeds
 

4x4 Forever

Emerald Shellback
Steel Soldiers Supporter
I am running the MRAP/395 combo, I love it, looks great and the truck runs 60 MPH on the highway. I have not towed anything with it yet but my truck is a couple of thousand lbs heavier than stock. It is not an easy task to change them on your own and I do have a pyro gauge and the fuel turned up in order to get those highway speeds
They look GREAT but I have concerns about towing a fully loaded M105 with this setup though...If I am on the road, I do not want to toast a clutch or tranny...
 

3dAngus

Well-known member
4,719
101
63
Location
Perry, Ga.
They look GREAT but I have concerns about towing a fully loaded M105 with this setup though...If I am on the road, I do not want to toast a clutch or tranny...

I just towed a fully loaded M105 to the Ga. Rally and back and the chase vehicle says I was going 70 and topped out at about 75. I'm running 395s on a bobbed deuce. I'll be checking with a GPS this week to verify the 70mph speed though I have total confidence in the observers in chase and am able to keep up with most traffic on I-75. Average speed down south of Atlanta on I-75 is about 75, in my 40 years experience driving it. Going up the longer hills slowed me down though.

There are no issue towing a fully loaded M105 with 395s on a deuce if done right.
The M105 is running 9X20 standard NDTs. It's all about the hitch, making it right, and keeping it level. I added a second lower hitch with adjustments for the 2" ball receiver/pintle combo underneath my normal deuce hitch so I can pull just about anything at just about any height. If you don't have it level, you'll have issues with any tires/wheels. I didn't even level it all out for the M105, but did it for another trailer so there is marginal room for error on the leveling.
 

4x4 Forever

Emerald Shellback
Steel Soldiers Supporter
I just towed a fully loaded M105 to the Ga. Rally and back and the chase vehicle says I was going 70 and topped out at about 75. I'm running 395s on a bobbed deuce. I'll be checking with a GPS this week to verify the 70mph speed though I have total confidence in the observers in chase and am able to keep up with most traffic on I-75. Average speed down south of Atlanta on I-75 is about 75, in my 40 years experience driving it. Going up the longer hills slowed me down though.

There are no issue towing a fully loaded M105 with 395s on a deuce if done right.
The M105 is running 9X20 standard NDTs. It's all about the hitch, making it right, and keeping it level. I added a second lower hitch with adjustments for the 2" ball receiver/pintle combo underneath my normal deuce hitch so I can pull just about anything at just about any height. If you don't have it level, you'll have issues with any tires/wheels. I didn't even level it all out for the M105, but did it for another trailer so there is marginal room for error on the leveling.
I'll be leaving the deuce as a tandem in the back...an extra 900# in tires and 1000# in axles and running gear compared to the bobber you have. I'd love to have the 70MPH but...wonder if anyone out there running a singled out deuce with 395s that tows and what it does with their EGTs, etc....

450# tire changes are also, uh, real fun on the side of the road...

With the rest of the above information and discussion, I am leaning back in the favour of the 1100's...
 
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