If you have enough clearance for the wider tire, yes.
You can but it is not advisable. The 245/75-16 will be 3.88% larger in overall diameter and it is never advisable to go over 3%. Your speedometer will read 57.6 at a true 60 mph. You will also have a slight loss of pulling power. You can however go to a 245/70-16 which is an excellent substitute and is only .75% larger.
A 225 75R 16 tire will fit on a 245 75R 16 rim. The only difference between the tires is the height of the sidewall.
a 245/70R 16 tire has a diameter of 29.5 a 225/75R 16 tire has a diameter of 29.3 which is only .2 inches larger on overall diameter. I ran a 245/70R 16 on my 02 Jeep Grand Cherokee, with only a slight problem which occurred when I turned the front wheel all the way to the right or left. I would rub the inner fender. The 02 Jeep Grand Cherokee I own used a 225/75R 16 as the factory tire size
a 245/70R 16 tire has a diameter of 29.5 a 225/75R 16 tire has a diameter of 29.3 which is only .2 inches larger on overall diameter. I ran a 245/70R 16 on my 02 Jeep Grand Cherokee, with only a slight problem which occurred when I turned the front wheel all the way to the right or left. I would rub the inner fender. The 02 Jeep Grand Cherokee I own used a 225/75R 16 as the factory tire size
245/75r/15
yes. it will make your speedometer a little off, but they will work.
Depends on what size the wheel is ... the round thing that the tire mounts onto! 225 75R 15
Not on the same axle.
This model offered two different wheel sizes. 15" and 16" the 15" is 235/75R/15 the 16" is 245/70R/16
No, this is a very bad swap as your speedometer will be off 2.8 mph at 60 mph and your engine will turn 38 more revolutions per mile which will hurt gas mileage. A good swap is to go with a 215/70-14.
120lbs on a trailer,the standard is printed on the tire.dual or single The tire pressue depends on what vehicle you have this tire mounted on. The PSI listed on the tire sidewall is the maximum pressure they tire can handle not the correct pressure for the vehicle it is mounted on. The correct pressure for your vehicle/trailer will be listed in the owners manual and on the drivers door post or on the trailer.
The tire size should be P235-75R -15. I have a 1998 Chevy Cheyenne 1500 4x4. Tire size is 265-75R-16
my 67 has h78 -14 bias ply tires . yours are probably same . if tou need more go to coker tires.com The correct size was G78/14. The equivalent size today is 225/75R/14. Don't be fooled by tire shops that will try to sell you 205/75R/14. This is a much more common size and tire shops usually will try to sell what they have in stock. If they can't get the 225's, then go somewhere else.