Makes no difference. A brake job does not require that you balance your tires. You should rotate and balance your tires every 6,500 to 7,500 miles or as noted otherwise in your owners manual.
All tires should be balance checked before being placed on a vehicle. If the tires are not balanced it will cause uneven wear and they will not last as long as they should.
Because the tires are out of balance or warped roaders < Aspen
Before-a bad alignment cannot "unbalance" a wheel, but an unbalanced wheel, if bad enough, can throw off an alignment.
It should be the back
Yes, you should have balanced all 4 tires.
Tires or wheels out of balance? Bent wheel? Bent axle? Drive shaft out of balance? Frozen brake caliper?
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
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.
Tires/wheels out of balance? Frozen brake caliper? Bent wheel?
brake replacememnt should not make car shakehave your wheels balanced and see if that fixes the problem. may have lost a balance weight off wheels when wheels removed from vehicleHave the tires balanced and/or check the wheels and tires for "round". A bent rim or damaged tire can cause shaking as well.
turn your wheel to the curb and pull your hand brake on and leave it in gear
The shop I work in charges $22.00 dollars for mounting and balancing each new tire.Another Answer:Some shops charge more and some assume that the tires must be balanced before you can use them and include balancing in the price of the tires. Unfortunately, that often makes it difficult to comparison shop.In reality, tire shops will charge whatever they want to balance tires. You can either pay the price or shop elsewhere.