No, a tire labeled with a size of 75 is actually wider than one labeled with a size of 70. The number typically refers to the tire's section width in millimeters; therefore, a 75 tire is 75 mm wide, while a 70 tire is 70 mm wide. Thus, 75 is bigger than 70 in this context.
300500
205-70 denotes a lower profile tire that 205-75
0.8 inches.
It is a lower cross-section, so will be slightly lower and wider.
P means passenger tire, 185 is the tread width, 70, or 75 is the aspect ratio of sidewall height to tread width. R is tire bead diameter. Same as wheel size. A 75 sidewall tire is taller than a 70 series.
You can but know that the 75 tire is going to be slightly taller than the 70 and because of that will have a slight effect on your speedometers accuracy. The 75 or 70 is actually a percentage figure telling you the tire sidewall is 70 percent as high as the tire is wide.
The difference between a 225/70 tire and a 215/75 tire lies in their width and aspect ratio. The first number represents the tire width in millimeters, so a 225 tire is wider than a 215 tire. The second number indicates the aspect ratio, which is the height of the sidewall as a percentage of the width; a 70 aspect ratio means the sidewall height is 70% of the width for the 225 tire, while a 75 aspect ratio means the height is 75% of the width for the 215 tire. This results in the 215/75 tire having a taller sidewall compared to the 225/70 tire.
Difference between a P225-70 r15 and P215-75 R15 tire Click the link and there you can compare tire sizes.
Of course you can but you should not. The 70 series tire will have a 1" smaller diameter than the 75 series tire. Your speedometer will be 2 mph too slow. A better substitute would be a 285/70-16.
If all other numbers are the same, a 75 will be about an inch higher than a 70
Allot of difference. The 265/75-16 is 5.03% 1.59" larger in overall diameter than the 255/70-16 and is a narrower tire. These 2 sizes are not interchangeable.
Yes