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I am planning on putting 37s on at some point and was just wondering if anyone knows if the stock spare tire mount can support a 37?
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That concept also couldn't drive. It moved at a walking pace using an electric motor.
Ford did it with the concept.
I was just saying that they did it for the concept. Tire mount looks to telescope out for 37s (and in for smaller sizes). I’ll trust that the Ford engineers figured out the strength part of it.That concept also couldn't drive. It moved at a walking pace using an electric motor.
That concept also showed a lot of stuff we can't actually have in real life.
We've also seen pre-pros with sagging tailgates already.
I wouldn't count on it being able to support a 37 long term if used as intended. Then again, we know they are testing 37s on the warthog. We won't know for sure until people start doing it. I'm hoping to find out pretty early on
I agree. That’s too much weight to be bouncing around on trails with the factory mount. Plus, it would also need to have the light relocated. This is an example of something that “will work”, at least in the short term, but is not ideal and may not last very long.Seems like Ford is doing it for now, but do you really want that much weight hanging on those two hinges forever? I'd be looking at a good high clearance rear bumper with swingout carrier for tire and jerry can. That's what I'm planning for my 34s, because I just can't see 10 years of use being a good thing on that back gate.
I also ran a 35 spare on my JKU, but it was a lighter than most set up. I would not have felt comfortable with a heavier wheel/tire mounted on there. The biggest concern for me was the hinges. The is a ton of documented tailgate sag issues out there.I wouldn't, but I bet it could do it for mall-crawling duty since they're engineering it to be warranted for 35 in tires for 36 months.
I put a 35 in tire on a stock JK mount and with low-speed off-roading and daily driving it was totally fine. It was a Jeep... shit always rattled anyway.
From a design standpoint, the hinge does not look long/tall enough to support the weight of a 37" spare. Will the centermount, on aluminum skin, help carry the load, unlikely, is there a steel skeleton frame within the tailgate to carry the load, unknown. Also, it does not appear the stock bumper will allow for a 37" spare as the 35" shown below is right to the bumper.I was just saying that they did it for the concept. Tire mount looks to telescope out for 37s (and in for smaller sizes). I’ll trust that the Ford engineers figured out the strength part of it.
Interesting. I would hope that Ford would take your analysis into consideration. It’s got to at least make it 3 years with 35s or Ford will have some pissed off owners making warranty claims.From a design standpoint, the hinge does not look long/tall enough to support the weight of a 37" spare. Will the centermount, on aluminum skin, help carry the load, unlikely, is there a steel skeleton frame within the tailgate to carry the load, unknown. Also, it does not appear the stock bumper will allow for a 37" spare as the 35" shown below is right to the bumper.
So comparing BFGs as an example, the 37x12.50 is 5 pounds heavier than the 35x12.50. Assuming the same wheel...what that percentage difference? About 5%. And by eyeballing it, you think the hinges designed for 35s are not “long or tall enough” to handle a 5% increase in weight? That’s some tight engineering right up to the line...From a design standpoint, the hinge does not look long/tall enough to support the weight of a 37" spare.
The 35" KO2 is 63 lbs (315/70/17) maybe similar to the Goodyear's we don't have specs on yet.So comparing BFGs as an example, the 37x12.50 is 5 pounds heavier than the 35x12.50. Assuming the same wheel...what that percentage difference? About 5%. And by eyeballing it, you think the hinges designed for 35s are not “long or tall enough” to handle a 5% increase in weight? That’s some tight engineering right up to the line...