nope
"Yes that would be approximately the same diameter tire. But why would you want to? Install the size tires listed in the owner's manual and on the driver's door post." You would want to in the the case where you found a set second hand tires that are like new, and cost half as much as brand new tires. I looked all over and I could only find 195/65. Nobody had 195/60. I cant afford brand new tires right now, not even close. So, that's why.
look at your current tires you have now, as long as all of the tire dimensions match on all tires, it will work. EX. if all of your tires are 195(width) 75(height) and R14 (diameter), then they will be compatible, but if you have 195 75 R16 on three tires, and 195 75 14 on one, one tire will be 2 inches smaller in diameter and your car will be leaning to one edge.
yes u can i just did it everything seems fine.
It depends on the size of your rims, just check the numbers on the tires you have now, the 185 is the width
Are your tires balanced? I'd check that first.
Check the front tires/rims for snow packed in them. That can cause it to be out of balance.
Yes you can as long as the rim diameter is the same. You left off the last number on your size. The sidewall will be taller on the 65 versus the 55 and this will affect the overall diameter of the tire so your speedometer may/will be off depending on the year of your car. The 65 will make less revolutions per mile than the 55.
If your tires are balanced and it's still pulling, then your car is ot of alignment. Go to a local tire shop to have an alignment done and that should rectify the problem.
NEVER put two different size tires on a 4 wheel drive. NEVER. Change them to ALL be the same size and hope nothing is damaged because of it.
First, place the transmission in 'Park' (automatic transmission), or 1st gear (manual transmission). Then block the front wheels. Now loosen, do not remove yet, the wheel nuts of the tires you wish to remove. Jack up the appropriate wheel until it is no longer touching the ground and support the vehicle with jackstands (or other safe means). Now the wheel nuts can be removed and then the tire. Installation is the reverse process. After you reinstall your wheels, don't forget to retorque your wheel nuts after having driven about 150 Kms/95 miles.
First thing I would do is make sure that all the lug nuts are on all the tires and that that they are TIGHT. Another possibility is that when the tires were rotated that some of the wheel weights were knocked off.
Big -O tires did mine for free,but I was buying tires so I guess they were getting something