15
No data
15
No data
No issues on mine, I paired them with my method racing wheel, trail series. This is on my KL.
Live in a snowy state. I've had Cooper Zeons, Goodyear Duratracs, and both KO2s and KM3s. The BFGs performed the best in winter conditions. Even with a wonky suspension during a blizzard in the high country, the KO2s did not slip up. It felt planted too. The off road performance is amazing too. Rocks getting stuck is apart of it. Tires are supposed to get dirty. The price is high, but you never want to go cheap when it comes to tires.
I have them on my XJ, and I’m going to get another pair when they wear out. I purchased and returned three sets of tires from other brands before settling on these.
I personally loved the KO2's I had and would definitely get them again as I've never personally had issues
I am presently running then on my Tacoma: daily driver, but I live in the middle of Canadian nowhere... They work great. They're not too rough on blacktop; they're great on gravel, packed earth, tough as nails and not too expensive.
I’ve had my KO2 35s for 2 years now, and they’ve been outstanding. Lots of mall parking lots, and I haven’t gotten stuck yet! But seriously, I’ll likely continue to stick with this tire. Really like them now, and I always have.
I’ve run Bfg on almost all of my vehicles. I’ve never had any issues with quality. Been that way for 29 plus, now.
At the moment we have K02's on our van year round and G015's as winter tires for the Touareg. Both do their job in snow and the occasional mud at the trail head. At the time I got the K02's because they look more bad ass. They are overkill for me and are loud and getting louder as they wear.
I worked in tire shops for many years and installed many sets of BFG all terrain K02. I used to cringe when I saw these tires on the work order. They are very heavy tires to handle and that weight doesn't help with mounting and balancing. Every time I installed a set of these, there would always be 1 or 2 tires that would ask for an obscene amount of weight when trying to balance. Sometimes as much as 10 ounces on a perfect rim. We would try to promatch them but sometimes they would still want 5-6 ounces. Sometimes we would peel the tire off and try another one from stock if we had more. If we had no other stock, we would slap the weight to it and hope the customer didn't come back with a vibration. Also, everyone I've ever talked to who had these said they turn hard as a rock when they are cold and are terrible on ice.
I've never liked them. Bought one set during a rain storm, literally spun out into the median in front of a Buffalo wild wings while pulling out of discount tire.
Write your review
Help others - share your experience with this part.