usually for a light passenger car such as the 106, the figures given on the door panel will be for 'normal road use' and 'towing/extra weight', usually next to the figures will be illustrations depicting this, it's doubtfull the figures you see are for front/rear settings, consult the handbook for further info, or your best option would be to visit a reputable tyre center and ask that your tyres be filled to the manufacters guidelines, this service is free in most large trye centers, but it's always a good gesture to offer a small token of appreciation eg £1/£2. hope this helps.
move back tires to front and front tires to back
front tires straight back rear tires crossed to the front
You have a damaged tire. Try rotating the front tires with the rear tires to see if the wobble switches to the back.
Tractors have small tires on the front to make it easier to steer the tractor. Large tires are harder to steer. The large tires in the back allow the tractor to have more power as it plows.
tire rotation
Front to back, no. Side to side, yes. If the tires are directional, no.
Rotate tires 2 front 225 and 2 back 245
front to back
Both front tires directly back to the rear on the same side they were on. Then RR tire to LF, LR tire to RF.
to go faster and 10 tires they dont help
Probably means you have a "front wheel" drive car....your front tires are what make your car go, not the back. I have front wheel drive on my car and once on a rainy day...my front wheels spun out taking off from a stop sign...wierd! I hate front wheel drive cars!
Front wheel drive