First off I am assuming the larger tires and wheels fit with adequate clearance.
The 15" tires are likely taller than the 14" tires, that means they have a larger circumference, thus a longer rolling distance.
It will make the car sit slightly higher.
Most likely the biggest difference will be that the speedometer and odometer will read incorrectly, I don't know just how much.
Your batter would overflow.
You would have 16 inch wheels and tires.
Reduce the baking time by about 5 minutes. The cakes would of course be thinner.
You can if they have the same mount lug pattern but why would you want to?
15 inch tires will not fit on 16 inch rims.15 inch tires will not fit on 16 inch rims.
I would look at your local dealer ship such as Tire Kingdom to find 35 inch tires for your car.
When you are looking for 33 inch tires, l would recommend the comparison sites like ebay and amazon. Many tires companies have accounts, and customer feedback is useful in helping you to find the best deal on 33 inch tires.
NO. As long as they all are the same size.
15 inch tires will not fit on 16 inch rims.15 inch tires will not fit on 16 inch rims.
Get 17 inch rims you cant put a 17 inch tires on a 16 inch rim!
Of course not you cannot install 15 inch tires on 14 inch wheels or vice versa. 14 inch wheels require 14 inch tires, and 15 inch wheels require 15 inch tires.
18.4 inch tractor tires are on 16 inch rims in most cases. I don't know what the limit would be I would think 13 inch on 11 inch rims would be fine. The hardest part would be to get it inflated if it is tubeless. There are tricks to that though.