Well, this project took a little time to complete. I hope to have the new wheels/tires on the truck next week.
The idea of polished aluminum on my truck seemed out of place so I had them black anodized. It's much cheaper than powder coating, 40% of the cost and the thickness is 0.1 mil - wheels are heavy enough as it is. It's used in the aviation industry quite a bit.
Learned a lot about commercial tires, I knew nothing when I started - not saying I'm an expert, but know a lot more now.
Searched for months, got lucky and some of these tires went on sale at the right time. The steer tires are Bridgeston M843, and the drive tires are Goodyear retreads, G741 MSD. If you decide to go the commercial tire route, always call a dealer for prices. If a tire is on sale the dealer will have the lowest price. The on-line retailers, like Simple Tire, etc. have good prices but dealers have better prices - on commercial tires. I could've gotten retreads for the steer tires - retreads for steer tires are ONLY restricted for buses, but then some tire places won't mount retreads on the front axle, regardless and I'm doing this to make things easier.
The Goodyear guy I was working with got Covid and no one else there knew anything about me, so, that pushed me back a few weeks. His prices were good, and he delivered them 2/3 of the way to me, no charge - the advantage of working with a dealer. He also relayed to me that WHD (waste haul drive) tires don't hold up as well on the highway per what he learned from a customer that runs dump trucks on highways. I decided to go with MSD (mixed service drive) instead.
I decided to go with premium tires mostly because I just wanted to hedge my bets. My research (albeit, limited) couldn't come up with any independent articles on tire quality (re: Chinese vs American). The ones I tended to find appeared to be funded by someone who benefited from the conclusions. These may be the last tires I get for this truck, it's hard to say. I expect the tire compound to last 50k - 100k miles.
I got the Bridgestone steer tires for $525 each, and the drive tires for $360 each. Mounting and stems were about $35 each.
Note: the flyer for the Bridgestone recommends drive or trailer, but their webpage also recommends steer.