ONLY the front tires can spend on a non-all wheel front end driven car.
If the vehicle is front wheel drive, yes.
Just peel out and see which tires spin! I'll save you the wear on your tires, it's front wheel drive.
The powered tires. On a front wheel drive car, the front wheels. On rear wheel drive, the rear wheels.
Probably means you have a "front wheel" drive car....your front tires are what make your car go, not the back. I have front wheel drive on my car and once on a rainy day...my front wheels spun out taking off from a stop sign...wierd! I hate front wheel drive cars!
If they are the same size, of course.
Front wheel drive. The weight of the engine puts pressure on the front tires giving you more traction to the tires that not only propel the vehicle but also steer the vehicle.
Only on a front wheel drive vehicle. On a rear wheel drive the rear tires wear faster. rotate your tires every 10,000 miles and they will wear evenly.
The front tires move when you accelerate a front-wheel drive car, while the rear tires move when you accelerate a rear-wheel drive car. All-wheel drive cars have power going to all four tires when accelerating.
If all wheel drive, yes. If front wheel drive, no. Only the front tires have to be off the ground.
It's advantageous in being a front wheel drive car, though, like front wheel drive cars are prone to doing on slick surfaces, it is prone to fishtailing. If you have good tires and know how to drive in snow, you should be alright with it. If not, then there really isn't a good that'll transform you from a poor driver in snow to an excellent one.
I think you mean front wheel drive, it is true there will be more wear on the front tires than on a rear wheel drive. That's why wheel rotation is important. As for vibration, that's far more likely to be wheels requiring balancing than because its front wheel drive.
more than likely, its the front tires if a front wheel drive.