No, there is 3.19% difference in diameter. Your speedometer will read 58 at a true 60 mph. Your power, mileage, handling, and ride will be adversely effected. If you wish to go to a 60 series tire then go with a 175/60-15 with will only be 0.77% smaller.
Trade the rear tires to the front and the front tires to the rear. Every other time you do it, trade the right front tire to the left rear and right rear to left front
Make sure you don't switch tires from one side to the other. Take the front tires and put them on the rear, and the rear tires will go on the front. Make sure they stay on the same sides that there on. That's it.
DIRECTIONAL tires stay on the same side of the vehicle Front to rear , rear to front
Rear
On the front tires.
On the front tires.
You cannot rotate tires on a vehicle when the rear tires are wider than the front. They must stay where they are,
2WD: on the front tires 4WD: on the front and rear tires but Honda Pilot 4WD is not a full 4WD therefore no need to put chains in rear tires unless you're manual engage 4WD.
Non-Directional Tires: Front same side to Rear; Rear criss-cross to Front. Directional Tires: Front to Rear & Rear to Front same side. Do Not Criss-Cross. Ref: Subaru Service Bulletin # 05-37-07.....
Ideally, you should at least replace both front or rear tires simultaneously, but you can get away with only replacing one if the difference between the tires isn't too great.
for traction
front tires straight back rear tires crossed to the front