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.
You cannot rotate tires on a vehicle when the rear tires are wider than the front. They must stay where they are,
Proper way to rotate tires on C240
front to back
Yes, there are. The Jeep website can help you find the exact tire you need or you can look at sites that specifically sell tires. It is much easier to order tires online than it used to be and is an easy way to save money on Jeep tires.
You can rotate them two different ways. Back to back, always keeping the tires on the same side of the car is one way. But the preferred method to rotate them is to move the front tires directly to the rear keeping them on the same side of the car as they were installed on as in, RF to RR, and LF to LR. Then take the rear tires and move the RR to the LF, and the LR to the RF.
At every other oil change.
Best used tires keeps several hundred tires on stock at all times. Contacting them will be the best way to see if they have what you need for your specific vehicle on hand.
The best way is on a trailer.
i have 35x12.5's on mine but there is some rubbing when the wheel is turned all the way.
There is no way to answer. Some rotate clockwise, while others rotate counter clockwise. The best setting is the manufacterer reccomended setting.
In the average truck that does not haul large loads the tires should be replaced every 40 thousand miles. This is the best way to ensure that your tires are giving you the best gas mileage.
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.