If all four tires on an MTB bicycle are 26 by 2.10, they are the same size.
Not unless they are all worn out. You can replace just two tires. I recommend you replace both front or both rear tires at the same time. Also make sure that all 4 tires are the exact same size. If the tires are fairly new and not worn you can replace just one tire if one was damaged as long as the size is the same.
Same way you'd mount tubes and tires on an regular rim. Pop the special valve out, check if you need a rim strip or not and mount up as usual.
Some words are sanitation and sanitize but they mean the exact same thing.
No, but make sure all 4 tires are the exact same size. No exceptions to this on a 4wd vehicle. Also if the tires are worn badly I would recommend you replace both tires on the same axle at once. The wear difference in a new tire and worn tire on the same axle can cause the vehicle to drift or pull to one side. If your rotate your tires as you should all 4 tires will wear evenly. That way you replace all 4 at the same time which is always the best.
80%nitrogen 20% oxygen........ which is the exact same gas as ambient air. you put AIR IN TIRES!!!
If you mean balance them, I say yes because you should balance and ROTATE the tires at the same time, thus making the front tires the back tires, and vise versa, Chuck
I have the same exact question!
Yes
it means "You"Incidentally, it is the exact same in Irish
NO, absolutely not. Never, ever, mix tire sizes on the same axle. You could put a set of 215 on the front and then a set of 205 on the rear but not a 205 & 215 on the same axle. Tires on each axle must be the exact same size.
Tire pressure? It means that one of the tires does not have the same pressure as the others.
3, -3 4, -4 these numbers all have the same "exact value" 3, -5 do not have the same exact value. exact value is how many s[pots away from 0 it is