It is recommended my many tyre manufacturers to have new tyres fitted to the rear of your car.
the reason for this is simple, if you loose grip on the front of your car you can regain control by straitening your steering lifting off the brake or accelerator pedal etc.
If you loose control of the rear of your car you will spin out with no way of regaining control.
so, put new tyres on the rear of your car
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.
Just go to your nearest bike shop, if you can afford it (and you need it) buy a new back or front odessey rim and tyre package if not just buy the tyre.
tire rotation
I am no expert, but I would put only two new tires on my front wheel drive car, I always put the best pair in the front. I am not good with cars but 2 be honest i think you should put the 2 new tires on the back because the back wheels are the 1s that move the car and they need better mobility
Rotate tires 2 front 225 and 2 back 245
Front to back, no. Side to side, yes. If the tires are directional, no.
It is recommended that all four tires on your vehicle be equal to one another, to avoid an uneven setting of tires. Really, it mostly depends on your definition of 'best'. If the 'best' tires are the more inflated tires, then you shouldn't put them on your vehicle at all. Usually, the better tires should go on the back of the vehicle (the two rear tires). However, if the better tires are vastly better than the other tires, then do not put them on your vehicle, because it would cause unbalancing in the vehicle, and other issues.
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.