In my opinion the new tires go up front. The steering tires need the grip.
Somewhere on your vehicle, usually on the drivers door jam you will find a sticker with tire information on it. It will tell you what size tire and what psi is required for both front and rear tires and spare. This information should also be in the drivers manual.
The tire pressure for vehicles which should be on a sticker, usually on the inside of the door, is most applicable to the original tires. You should use the tire pressure stamped on the tires which are on the car (the law requires this info be on the tires). Probably around 35psi. Many Festy owners set their pressure about 5 lbs. lower on the rear tires to improve ride (there's no rear weight in a stiva). I believe I'm running 34 front, 29 rear.
Yes if you want better road holding. No if you want less friction and better fuel economy.
PSI is the abbreviation used to denote tire pressure. Tire pressure refers to how much air should be inflated into a car's tires.
You might need to get your tires balanced, or you may need some front end work done. Getting your tires balanced is the less expensive of the two though so I would try that first.
The powered tires. On a front wheel drive car, the front wheels. On rear wheel drive, the rear wheels.
I am no expert, but I would put only two new tires on my front wheel drive car, I always put the best pair in the front. I am not good with cars but 2 be honest i think you should put the 2 new tires on the back because the back wheels are the 1s that move the car and they need better mobility
ONLY the front tires can spend on a non-all wheel front end driven car.
The general rule of thumb is that you should be able to see the tires of the car in front of you touching the pavement.
P155/60TR15.0BSW AS front tires 175/55 rear tires
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!
You most likely need to tires for the front of your car. You should replace your tires as soon as possible.
more than likely, its the front tires if a front wheel drive.
It depends on how old your tires are and how warn they are. The front tires will wear out first, so if they replace your tires regularly then you can get away with only replacing the front two. If you rotate your tires when you change your oil or don't replace your tires often enough then you will probably want to replace all four at the same time.
They are usually placed underneath the car. They can be placed under tired, mufflers, and they can be placed inside the rims of tires. I've heard of tracking devices being placed inside of seats and engines also.
It all depends on how you use or abuse your car. The tires have a treadwear rating written on the tire sidewall. Extreme braking will tend to use up front tires, extreme acceleration will tend to use up the rears.
Rear