Yes it will fit and probably will work but it is not the correct size.
a tire or tube in a tire. could be an engine valve you`d probably have to be more spacific
A motorcycle tire blowout can kill you. Here is my general opinion: The tire may be defective, any Michelin tire is not always best, the fine steel web may have worked loose and is a fine poker into the tube. Take the deflated tire in your hands and very slowly feel for a sharp wire. Next the rim is metal and has a fine burr or a piece of sharp something in the rim or spoke area. Or the brand of tubes may be left in the outdoors too long and is cracked. If the rim spins while the is gripping it will tear at the valve stem, or show some wear that introduces fine rock to eat the tube. Try putting on the new tube with fine talc powder and before you inflate the tire seal it to the rim with any sticky glue. Or add a new shim or tape on the inner rim to protect your tube.
If it is tubeless then patch the tire on the inside. If it has a tube patch the tube.
It doesn't hurt to inflate a tube outside the tire (assuming you use low pressure - you can't inflate it to the same pressure that you could when it's in a mounted tire!), if that's what you are asking. If you are asking about the recommended procedure to replace an inner tube, you want to have the inner tube (mostly) deflated, then put it in the tire and mount the tire. Then partially inflate and deflate the inner tube (so it can move and work twists out). (I usually pull the valve out and go through a few inflate/deflate cycles so the tube can situate itself. Then I replace the valve and fill the tire.)
No
You can use a radial tube in a bias ply tire BUT you can not use a bias tube in a radial tire. The sidewall flex of a radial tire is greater than that of a bias ply. A bias tube cannot flex as rapidly as a radial tube and so the resulting friction or rubbing create too much heat and the tire/tube combination will blow.
Possibly in Canadian Tire
Okay in order to answere this question accurately one must first know if the tire being repaired is a tubeless tire or a tube type....look at the tire valve...is it sealed into the rim??? If it is then it is a tubeless tire and the hole can be repaired with a plug type repair, air up the tire locate the leak and from an auto parts store purchase a tubeless tire repair kit follow the instructions on how to plug the leak(remember if the hole is too large replace the tire with a new one of the same size. If the tire has a tube....you must find a way to break down the tire and remove the tube in order to find the leak, by airing the tube up in order to locate the hole and patch it, buy a tube tire repair patch kit at an auto parts store and follow directions on patching the hole in the tube, reinstall tire and tube. If the tube is ripped too badly replace the tube with a new one of the same size always be sure to check that there is no nail, etc. inside the tire before replacing or repairing the tube. Air up tire according to manufacturer's specs.
There is no inner tube and sidewall damage can not be repaired.
It's just a small bicycle tire. Use a screwdriver or similar tool to separate the tire from the rim, remove old tube, insert new tube, add air.
Put an inner tube in the tire.
A tire that is designed to seal on a rim without a tube inside.