Usually a new tire is replacing an old one and as such is actually going to replace that.
If you mean rotating a new tire into the mix generally it goes on the Left Front, regardless of what drivetrain the vehicle has. For best instructions, the owners manual or a mechanical journal will have a chart for your particular vehicle.
In general to replace a tire, you jack a car up by the supporting frame next to the tire you are replacing, you remove the hubcap if there is any using either a screwdriver or the appropriate tool if your car has a hubcap key. Next the bolts holding it on need to be undone with a tire iron, and the tire removed. The new tire is then put in place, and the bolts are restored using the proper torque (or just slightly snug if you don't have the available to tools to ensure proper torque), and the hubcap should snap back on afterwords.
Get in the grass or gravel and floor it. If the front tire spins it's front wheel drive. If the rear tire spins it's rear wheel drive. If neither front or rear spins, take it out of park!!
They are front wheel drive.
more than likely, its the front tires if a front wheel drive.
fish tail per the test, but in my opinion woudl depend if you have rear wheel drive or front wheel drive
Yes and no. If it isn't too much different then you can use it short term on a non-drive axle. In other words, put it on the front if your car is a rear wheel drive or put it on the back if your car is front wheel drive.
Yes , it's front wheel drive
The Jeep Compass is available in front wheel drive or all wheel drive.
Depends on the car front wheel drive it a cradle rear wheel drive it a sub frame.
brake pads shot
front wheel drive
It would be a front wheel drive car... the only 'car' from Honda that i know of that's rear wheel drive would be the s2000 and the NSX... a shame
rear, as far as i know BMW has never made a front wheel drive car but they do also make all wheel drive cars