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BFGoodrich KO3 tire in mud
Oh the places you'll go with a set of BFGoodrich KO3 all-terrain tires. (Photo: Drew Martin)

The Most Popular All-Terrain Tire Just Got Better

Meet the BFGoodrich KO3. Here鈥檚 what you need to know.

Published: 
BFGoodrich KO3 all-terrain tire splashing through mud
(Photo: Drew Martin)

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Next time you drive anywhere鈥攖o work, school, your local ski area鈥攃heck the tires on the vehicles around you and more than likely you鈥檒l see a set of BFGoodrich KO2 all-terrains (ATs) rolling by. Long loved for their performance and looks, the KO2 is the most ubiquitous all-terrain tire on the market, and for good reason.

Made to perform well in all conditions the KO2 has helped thousands of drivers plow through snow, mud, and sand on the way to their next adventures. Here at 国产吃瓜黑料 we鈥檝e hammered home many times that a quality tire is the most important upgrade you can make for off-road performance, and we鈥檝e always rated the KO2 as a good investment.

After 10 years of KO2 popularity, BFG , which moves the tire forward in several ways. I鈥檝e been testing the tires for months on my 2024 Tundra in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and also had the chance to drive them during an off-road adventure in Alaska. I鈥檝e been impressed with the performance over thousands of miles of pavement and every off-road condition imaginable. Whether tearing up muddy roads, crawling up high-clearance 4×4 routes, trying to park my car in deep snow banks, or cruising freeways at 75 mph, the KO3 has always felt like a good choice.

To learn how the BFG engineers took an already top-performing tire like the KO2 and made it even better, I sat down with two people who were instrumental in the design and launch of the BFGoodrich KO3鈥擝randon Sturgis, BFG鈥檚 global product manager, and Jon Jewell, one of the company鈥檚 product design and industrialization engineers. Sturgis and Jewell started the conversation by listing all the spots where they wanted to see improvement: wear, road noise, and performance on gravel, snow, mud, and wet spots.

Improved Durability

Better wear was a key focus for two reasons. First, the BFGoodrich KO3s are expensive so buyers want their investment to last. Second, KO3 buyers use the tires hard and don鈥檛 want them to fail because of uneven or fast wear. BFG made the KO3 15 percent more durable than the KO2 by using a new rubber compound and packing the lugs closer together to create a denser contact patch where they meet the road. The rubber compound is formulated for supposed to be better at absorbing the contact from the road, which creates less wear, and the denser contact patch reduces the stress on the individual lugs.

The KO3 comes with the same 50,000-mile warranty as the KO2, but thanks to the more durable build, the KO3 is rated for today鈥檚 increasingly powerful trucks and SUVs that put extra wear on tires鈥攍ike my Tundra.

With the explosion of overlanding in the U.S. and across the world, BFG saw that the KO2s were spending increased time on rough dirt roads. For the KO3s they wanted to cut down on what鈥檚 called 鈥渃hip and tear,鈥 where parts of the lugs get sliced by the gravel and eventually tear away, reducing the tire鈥檚 effectiveness and longevity. BFG鈥檚 new KO3 rubber compound allows for increased elastic deformation in the lugs so that they can conform to gravel in the road instead of getting shredded. The lug pattern is also designed so that no one individual lug takes a particular beating鈥攁ll the grouped lugs on each section of the tire work together to absorb the impact.

Sidewall durability is important on an all-terrain tire because sidewall punctures are pretty much impossible to repair. To ensure drivers don鈥檛 get stranded with the KO3, BFG built an extra-burly sidewall into the tire that uses technology from their Baja T/A KR line of tires that are used on high-powered, off-road race vehicles.

BFGoodrich KO3 tread closeup
(Photo: Drew Martin)

More Versatile Performance

Those of us who love to ski, or just enjoy exploring in winter, will be happy to hear that the KO3 improves snow traction thanks to a new sipe design. Sipes are the slits in the lugs that open as the tire makes contact with the ground, allowing the lug to bite into the snow. The sipes on the KO3 go the full depth of the lug, creating a large bite. Inside the sipe there鈥檚 an egg carton-like structure that keeps the two sides of the lug from deforming when it hits the road, enabling a better bite and more even wear that allows the lugs to last longer.

鈥淲e wanted to make sure we created a tire that performed just as well in the Texas summer as it does in the Canadian winter,鈥 Jewell said.

BFG makes a tire called the KM3 that鈥檚 designed specifically to excel in mud, but the multiple-use KO3 does amazingly well鈥攕omething I saw as we powered through puddles in Alaska. That鈥檚 thanks to a more aggressive lug pattern on the side of the tire and mud-phobic bars between the lugs that help release the suction that builds up when mud gets pushed in between the lugs so that it can fall out and the lugs can go back to biting into new mud down the road.

To ensure the KO3s stay planted on wet pavement, the lug pattern was designed to push water out of the way when the rubber meets the road. The new rubber compound, along with the sipes, also help create grip so that you can cruise down the freeway safely, rain or shine.

BFGoodrich KO3 tires churning through mud
(Photo: Drew Martin)

Reduced Road Noise

Since most drivers spend the majority of their time on pavement and don鈥檛 want to listen to a constant hum, BFG engineers created a pattern where not all the lugs hit at the same time, designed lugs that give off variable pitches, which creates a less ferocious noise, and tuned some lugs to cancel each other鈥檚 noise out. In my testing, I found the tires are louder than a regular street tire, but not by much.

All of this engineering takes time, of course, and Sturgis said BFG first started developing the KO3 back in 2015. The KO03 also builds on the 10-year run of the KO2, and the 15 year run of the original KO before that.

BFG tested the KO3 for years before launching. The ultimate test comes when they sling their tires on buggies and trucks running the Score Baja 500 and the Baja 1000鈥攖wo of the world鈥檚 most famous off-road races. They鈥檝e had a lot of success: Over the years BFG-equipped vehicles have won 35 Baja 500s and 343 Baja 1000s. The KO3s were used on the Baja Challenge 1000-winning buggies that won the 2022 San Felipe 250 and the 2023 Baja 1000. 2021, 2022, and 2023 Baja 1000 races.

I didn鈥檛 get to ask Jewell and Sturgis about when BFG plans to launch the KO4, or whatever iteration of the all-terrain tire they have up their sleeves next. They both, however, hinted that, as product people, they鈥檙e always watching how the current product is performing, then weighing that with the development of vehicles and how people want to adventure.

鈥淚 can tell you that ideation never stops, and at BFG we think there is no reason to not apply what we鈥檝e learned as soon as we can,鈥 Jewell said.

Lead Photo: Drew Martin

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