DIRECTIONAL tires stay on the same side of the vehicle
Front to rear , rear to front
Directional tires feature arrows on the sidewall that indicate what direction the tire should rotate when the vehicle is moving forward.
Front to back, no. Side to side, yes. If the tires are directional, no.
Some are directional like the eagle F1, however most are not directional.
Non-Directional Tires: Front same side to Rear; Rear criss-cross to Front. Directional Tires: Front to Rear & Rear to Front same side. Do Not Criss-Cross. Ref: Subaru Service Bulletin # 05-37-07.....
Directional tires are ideal for hard surfaces in good weather conditions. The best tires for driving in snow are snow tires.
No, I have directional rain tires on one of my minivans and they are very quiet and excellent in heavy rain.
Front to rear. Don't include the spare in the rotation. Because modern radial tires get a directional "set" (and often have directional treads on traction tires as well) the tires want to continue spinning the direction they always have. If hard cornering has over-worn the outside edges of the front tires, they can be swapped, but that will require taking them off the rims and re-mounting them. To rotate them to the other side would spin them backward and not only reduce their life drastically, but cause their thus-shortened life to end with a bang rather than a whimper.
Your tires would definitely have to rotate if you are speeding !
In my area it costs $20-$32 to rotate and balance the tires.
No
Rotate tires 2 front 225 and 2 back 245
Sure, you can balance the tires. Any place that sells tires can balance your tires. You cannot rotate the tires as you have already stated they are not the same size. Balance but do not rotate.