you are not supposed to, depending on how many miles are on the rest of the tires they must all be replaced. In order to replace just one the new one must be within 1/32 to 3/32 of the other tires
Tire rotation can be tricky, usually because tire rotation is dependent on tire and drive type. However, in all wheel drive vehicles, with non directional tires, it is pretty simple. The front passenger wheel is changed out with the back driver side wheel, the front driver side wheel changed out with the rear passenger wheel.
Only if it is all wheel drive. The front wheel drive vans have the "donut" spare.Only if it is all wheel drive. The front wheel drive vans have the "donut" spare.
ok what your not understanding all wheel drive very different from 4 wd all wheel drive ATV are only a polaris 4wd is everything else all wheel drive mean each tire pulls 4wd means the rear axle is solid and both tire pull together in the back and front have independent pull
Basically, no. It would be much easier to just buy an all wheel drive car.
Speedometer/odometer accuracy will not be correct. Center of gravity will change (roll over factor). Handling and performance and fuel mileage will change, probably not for the better. All 4 wheels must be of same size if vehicle is 4 wheel drive or all wheel drive.
doent matter if vehicle is all wheel drive or not. you should only change tires that are worn out,unless you got lots of money and just like to spend tire companies will tell you to rotate and change new tires,because the more you buy, the more money they make. if it is not worn out, why change it
There is no space for a spare tire if you have AWD. That is why factory provides the Run Flat Tires.
If the vehicle is all wheel drive, having one tire that is smaller than the others (different size or less tread) can damage a transfer case.If the vehicle is all wheel drive, having one tire that is smaller than the others (different size or less tread) can damage a transfer case.
I just took my all wheel drive Subaru to Town Faire Tire today. Before the service man knew my car was an all wheel drive, he explained about alignments and said that all wheel drive cars often need alignment more frequently. At 12,000 the print out figures showed that my car needed one.
No. A "all wheel drive" is all the time four wheel drive. A 4x4 or 4-wheel drive can be set to drive in two wheel drive or four wheel drive.
No. Wranglers are rear-wheel drive. They all came stock with 4-wheel drive though. The rear is not posi traction. One tire can spin while the other seems to stay still.
205/65R/15