No, Because the drivetrain part wont line up.
Sorry man! The front and rear tires on a bike are totally different in their design and almost always in their width.
In addition, the floor in front of the rear tire had to be cut away.
You can put the tire on the front. The rotation arrow should point the same whether it is on the front or back.
No. You can't use an unserviceable tire, period.
the tire pressure is on the right side of the front frame behind the forks as you sit on it as you are driving and I use nitrogen in my tires that keeps the tire pressure at a steady air pressure do to heat from the sun and the road temperatures in front and back , should be 30 for the front and 40 in the rear.
There isn't one, it uses the same resivor that the front washers use. Under the bonnet, just behind the right hand front tire.
mine I use 35 psi for the 2 front tires and 40 psi for the 2 rear tires.
The tire jack on a 1991 Chevy Silverado is used by placing it at the anchor points just behind the front tires and just in front of the rear tires. It is raised or lowered using the provided detachable handle.
you didnt say what model xvs 650 front 34psi rear 36-38 pending on load, anything larger like the 1100 front 36 rear 40
you have to use the adjustments on the tie rods on each side. as a general rule the front wheels should line up and be paralell with the back wheels, but be sure to keep your streering wheel straight! but to get it right, you will have to put it on a machine. a straight edge that reaches from the rear of the rear tire to the front of the front tire is necessary, and simple way to get it drivable.
use a Pingel Rear Sprocket Spacer. This allows 140 mm tires to be run. Otherwise use 130mm-sized MT90 tire
Generally no for vehicles that were not designed to use differing tire sizes. For vehicles designed to use equal sizes, using different sizes can lead to unsafe handling quirks. This is especially true for using different sizes on the left and right of front or the rear. That is why a limited use spare tire has restrictions on speed, etc.