Capri,
Again thanks for your responses, lots of good info.
Are these the ones that are "slippery"
The daughtor had a set of new "something" Destinations on her Trailblazer, thes tires would very easily spin in just about any road condition, such that she was almost afraid to drive the car. We replaced them with tires with a much "blockyer" tread and maybe softer rubber, much better.
"P metric tires tend to use tread compounds that are good for RR"
It "seems" common in the light truck world.
"I am curious about your comments about not switching from P to LT tires. I know this is sometimes done (I don't think I would use "commonly" to describe the frequency.)"
Yup, but it is a truck. And probably a larger differnce when going from the 35 psi to 80 psi. That's why I didn't want to go to 80 psi, limiting it to 50-60 instead.
"This really increases the spring rate, and a suspension system (springs, shocks, sway bars) set up for lower pressure tires just isn't going to react as well to this higher pressure - and vice versa."
Yes, I've put more then that in my junk Windstar.
"Is the 1,145 # the payload?"
True, and yes true, that's why I'm trying to learn the capacities off those components also, no point in having 1 piece of the system way larger in capacity. But the tires are what's on the road and gets abused by rocks, logs, holes, etc.
"and the vehicle is designed around that. Changing tires to a higher capacity doesn't change the capacity of the rims or the axles or the frame.
Agreed. Just trying to improve the weak points to avoid future problems.
"Commonly done or not, this isn't the way the vehicle was designed. Put a different way, if the vehicle frame cracked, GM wouldn't be at fault."
No and yes, the truck camper crowd usually goes to the heavier trucks, 250/2500's, 350/3500's and even the 450/550's. But no matter which truck they have, whether 1/2ton, 3/4 or 1+ton, many, (not all) still overload them and make the changes I mentioned. There are folks running up to and over 2000lb overloaded on a 1/2 ton.
"I'm hoping that you really mean a larger capacity vehicle that also includes all the stuff you mentioned, not a lower capacity vehicle where the frame and axles aren't changed out, too!"
You covered it, I was interested in $$ costs, ride/handling costs and anything else that would be caused by switching tires.
"I don't follow what you mean by "costs" - other than what I mentioned."
Dan