P : Passenger Car .
Look on the driver's door support and there is a decal with sizes and tire pressures. DO NOT mix tire sizes as it will disrupt the antilock brakes.
No, never mix tire sizes.
Low tire pressure, tire sizes that do not match, out of alignment, or bent suspension parts.Low tire pressure, tire sizes that do not match, out of alignment, or bent suspension parts.
Your correct tire size is on your door sticker.
315/70/17
Generally no for vehicles that were not designed to use differing tire sizes. For vehicles designed to use equal sizes, using different sizes can lead to unsafe handling quirks. This is especially true for using different sizes on the left and right of front or the rear. That is why a limited use spare tire has restrictions on speed, etc.
Tire sizes will be stamped into the side of every tire on the vehicle. The number will start with the letter "P". There should be 3 sets of numbers each indicating a different dimension of the tire. For example, (I am not saying this is the size of your tire) a tire might have the numbers P225 70 R14. The first number following the P is the width of the tire (tread portion). In this example the tire is 225mm wide. 70 would be the height of the tire in this example. The measurement is taken from the rim to the top tire. and R14 would be the radius of the rim. or 14" rims in this example.
anywhere from a 28 inch tire to a 31 inch tire.
check w/tire shop
Tire sizes are on the door jamb sticker.
Stock tire sizes for the 1997 F150 were P235/70/R16, P255/70/R16, or 265/70/R17 ( I can't remember if the 17s were P-metric or LTs)
all the tire sizes that will fit your sunfire without havig to make adjustments would be 14, 15 and 16.