No, that's going so narrow they may not inflate properly on a wide rim.
Yes, as long as both are the same on each axle. Additionally: they have to be the same "type" of tire. You can not mix Radial Tires (example; P255 65 R17) with Bias ply or Diagonal tires (example P255 65 D17) on the same vehicle.
mine is p255/75r15. im acually online buying tires lol
Yes, the 75 has a taller sidewall than the 70. If the car has stiffer suspension it will give a feeling of sway the taller you get. Can you? Yes. Should you? No. Your speedometer will be off and your ride and handling will suffer. If you must change sizes go with a 265/65-16 or 245/75-16. My advice is to stick with the OEM size.
What I have on mine is P255 50vR16... I'm also trying to figure out if these are right though. What I have on mine is P255 50vR16... I'm also trying to figure out if these are right though.
Yes
Yes
18" P255/70R18 (same as the 2010 tundra)
P255/70/16
can i replace a p255/60 r15 with a p215/70 r15
The correct factory tire size for a 2007 Jeep Wrangler is P255/75R17.
We put B.F. Goodrich T/A Radials, P255/60R15 on all four corners of our 1969 Firebird. The rear tires really fill up the wheel well, and look great. They almost rub, but not quite. The front tires didn't fit. They rub when turning in either direction. We installed a spare set of P215/70R15 on the front. They look good, are about the same diameter as the bigger tires in back, and don't rub too bad. They only rub when you turn very tight (like when parking) and the contact is at the rear of the wheel well. There isn't anything making contact that could cut the tires. I would recomend 245/60 14 on the back and 215/70 14 on the front providing you are using a factory 14x7 wheel. The total height of these tires are within .5 of an inch. I did this on a 69 chevelle and it looked and handled nice.
a 255 is 10.03 inches a 235 is 9.25 inches