New Here - Tires + Brakes 2016 Denali

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DenaliMan16

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Hi guys.

New here. Enjoyed reading some of your posts. Hoping some of you can give me recommendations. I just hit the 40k mark on my 2016 Denali.

Running Bridgestone Alenzas now..tread is down to almost nothing so I’m looking to replace them within the week and before winter really settles in here in NJ.

Dealership quoted me around $800 (that’s with the $100 rebate) for new Bridgestones ... are there better options for roughly the same price? I hear good things about Michelin Defenders and Premeir LTX which seem slightly more expensive. But I’ve also heard good things about Pirellis. Any experience with either or do you have any other tires you stand by ? All Season

BrakePads + Rotors. Dealership quoted me $427 front / $427 rears. Yikes ! So I’m thinking of getting the parts myself and doing the job. Should I be looking at OEM or aftermarket ? What we be a good combo for around $350 all in ? Would love to do a big brake kit but not in the budget right now but would love anything that’s a slight upgrade over stock.

Thanks guys !
 

sealandsky

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My former Denali (2016) came with Continental tires and they didn't last long. I replaced them with Michelin Defenders and they were nice. Now I'm driving a 2019 Denali and it came with the Bridgestone Alenza's like you have. So far they seem good and maybe comparable to the Defenders, but when it comes time to replace them I'll still go with Michelin.

For your brake replacement I don't think the price is out of line. I'm pretty sure they will be replacing your brake rotors along with the pads (they don't resurface them like they used to). Make sure you request the heavy duty pads if you stay with stock brakes.
 

Miami-Dade

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I vote for the Michelin Defenders. My Continental tires were shot after 40K miles plus the ride was horrible compared to the Michelin Defenders.

I agree with Rich on the brakes.

Welcome from Brooklyn N.Y.&Miami Jordan!
 

wjburken

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I have run Bridgestone Alenzas H/L’s on all 3 of my Yukon XL’s and the one Suburban we had, and have had very good luck with them, even in the snow here in Iowa. Have gotten 80K+ out of every set I’ve had, but they are mostly highway miles and not that aggressive of driving habits. I do make sure to maintain tire pressure, check alignment at least yearly and rotate every 7000 miles or so.

That being said, I don’t think you can go wrong with Michelin’s either. I have never had them so I can’t speak from any experience other than what I have read here.
 

Big Mama

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Welcome from Virginia. I’m surprised you need rotors at 40k. Is this typical on the newer rigs? Rich, why can’t you turn the rotors on these? Different material?
 
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DenaliMan16

DenaliMan16

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My former Denali (2016) came with Continental tires and they didn't last long. I replaced them with Michelin Defenders and they were nice. Now I'm driving a 2019 Denali and it came with the Bridgestone Alenza's like you have. So far they seem good and maybe comparable to the Defenders, but when it comes time to replace them I'll still go with Michelin.

For your brake replacement I don't think the price is out of line. I'm pretty sure they will be replacing your brake rotors along with the pads (they don't resurface them like they used to). Make sure you request the heavy duty pads if you stay with stock brakes.


Hey Man... yea so I’m leaning towards defenders. The Bridgestones weren’t horrible but I was expecting a little more out of them.

As far as the brakes, yea they quoted me pads + new rotors. I don’t think the price is horrible for dealership but I think I can get all the parts for right around $350 - $400 So I do think the labor charge is a little much on a 1-2 hr job.
 
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DenaliMan16

DenaliMan16

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Welcome from Virginia. I’m surprised you need rotors at 40k. Is this typical on the newer rigs? Rich, why can’t you turn the rotors on these? Different material?

Thanks Big mama. So I’m told that I do need rotors but I think it’s more of a timing thing with GMC. If your doing the pads you might as well throw on new rotors. I’m not noticing a ton of vibration of anything. I used to get mine resurfaced but that was years ago. I’m told that pricing on rotors have come down so drastically that it’s recommended to just replace them. If you guys have and good pad + rotor combos that you recommend I’m all ears.
 
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DenaliMan16

DenaliMan16

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I have run Bridgestone Alenzas H/L’s on all 3 of my Yukon XL’s and the one Suburban we had, and have had very good luck with them, even in the snow here in Iowa. Have gotten 80K+ out of every set I’ve had, but they are mostly highway miles and not that aggressive of driving habits. I do make sure to maintain tire pressure, check alignment at least yearly and rotate every 7000 miles or so.

That being said, I don’t think you can go wrong with Michelin’s either. I have never had them so I can’t speak from any experience other than what I have read here.

80k! That’s amazing! So I’m at the 2 year mark but I’ve never done my alignment however I do rotate every 7500. Miles are probably 80% local 20% highway.
 

sealandsky

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Welcome from Virginia. I’m surprised you need rotors at 40k. Is this typical on the newer rigs? Rich, why can’t you turn the rotors on these? Different material?

To save weight and cost they make them at a minimum thickness. After miles of wear there's not enough material left to machine them.
 

Joseph Garcia

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Michelin Defenders.

There was a thread that was circulating within the last month or two with the same question as you posted for tire preferences. Perhaps, someone on this Forum can post a link, so that you can read all of their comments.

There were a number of opinions and perspectives, but as I remember, there was concurrence on Michelin Defenders from folks who drove their trucks mainly on paved roads, versus off-road driving.
 

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