For me it was a simple decision. I talked to a few of the tire engineers that I know and read the tire requirements in the TRA (Tire and Rim Association Inc.) manuals (
About TRA). They define the tire requirements that all the manufactures design to for North America which is why all tire of given type (LT, ST, P metric etc.), size and load range all have the same sidewall rating regardless of brand. The construction differences between an LT and ST tires are minimal. The ST may have more UV stabilizer and a slightly harder rubber compound. Beyond that the radial construction is the same. The big difference is they have lower requirements for speed and duty cycle. They only have to meet 65 MPH speed rating at the max load and have only a 80% duty cycle. The LT has a much higher speed rating (95 MPH to 120+) and a 100% duty cycle. This means that the LT tire must be able to carry the rated load 100% of the time at the higher speed whereas the ST only has to carry the rated load for 80% of the test at the lower 65 MPH speed. The ST may also have a higher failure rate before requiring a recall. These are the reasons that a ST tire of the same size and load range as the LT is rated to carry more. It doesn't have to do it as often or as fast which means less heat over the life cycle. Physics would dictate that the same size tire at the same pressure should be able to carry the same load, but the rules change when the duty cycle and test parameters change giving the ST a higher load rating, but no more psychical capability. This is why I have also been changing all of my ST tire to LT tire with the same sidewall max load capability or higher.