If you open the drivers door,it should be on the white label, on the "B" pillar or by the hinge on the AIf you open the drivers door,it should be on the
white label, on the "B" pillar or by the hinge on the A
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Fewer professional tyre fitters these days will deviate from fitting tyres of the original size and spec. due to them being the expert in the contract and therefore bear the greatest share of responsibility should anything go wrong.
Many insurers these days consider fitting tyres of non-original size and spec to be a notifiable modification. If the insurer isn't notified of such a modification, they will be entitled to withdraw all or part of their cover in the event of something going wrong.
In the aftermath of a collision or other type of accident the police tend to examine the vehicle tyres first...
I'm assuming this is about a rim size for a tyre? The tyre pressure will depend on a number of different things. The tyre size that is fitted, the vehicle it is fitted to, the weight it regularly carries and the average speeds the tyre has to cope with.
Most modern cars and trucks have a plate somewhere on the car giving the tyre size and recommended pressures for light load and fully loaded. It is often on a hidden panel.
Starting with the driver's door, open each door in turn and look at the area normally hidden by the door when it is closed. Also check inside the fuel filler cover.
There are plenty of online sites where you can look the pressures up if you have the vehicle and the tyre size.
Do you normally fit 195/70 15 tyres? The tyres would fit, BUT the 195/65 R15 tyre is actually smaller than the 195/70 R15 tyres. The rolling surface, the area with the tread marks on, is shorter on the 65 size tyres. This will make your speedo read at the wrong speed and might affect the handling.
This is what the numbers mean. 195 = width of the tread across the tyre in mm. 65 = height of the side wall as a percentage of the tread width, (65% of 195mm). 15 = diameter of the wheel rim in inches.
typo there same tyre sizes
geerally on all cars
tyre placard sticker somehwere on the chassis
or glove box owners book
says what size tyres are suggested
talk with a tyre shop as they have the regulations as to tyre sizes that can be fitted
While you can put wide tyres on the vehicle you are limited by law as to the diameter of the tyre that can be fitted as the vehicle has been certified to run a certain diameter tyre and if you breach that certificate then the vehicle will be un-roadworthy, have an incorrect speedo reading and will negate any insurance in an accident
If the stud pattern and off set is the same they will fit on. The problem is that regulation requires the ride height to be maintained which means that you will have to fit a lower profile tyre . For example if you use 15 " 205/95-r15 tyres then you may have to go to 205/65 r16 tyres . Talk with a tyre shop and discuss the legal requirements as far as insurance goes with a wheel size change
The wheels could have been changed on the car from the standard original factory set and hence the tyre size may not be the standard factory original size. The size of the tyres on the vehicle now is moulded into the side wall of the tyres and is easy to read. Check all 4 tyres because larger size tyres may have been fitted as a pair to the rear.
The size might read - for example 245 45 18 or 235 45 17 (there are a huge number of sizes for each model of tyre).
The first 3 numbers are the width of the tyres in mm eg 225 mmm or 235 mm and so on. The second 2 numbers are the tyre profile size or ratio (which can be 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 and so on. The third number is the wheel diameter size. If you have 18 inch wheels on the car the tyres will read 18 or if they are 17 inch wheels the tyres will read 17 and so on.
If you have the standard factory 15 inch (diameter) x 6.0 inch (wide) wheels then the tires fitted were size: 205/70R15 (205 is the tyre width in mm and the 15 denotes the tyre bead diameter in inches for fitting to 15 inch wheels. The R denotes the speed rating of the tire).
The tires currently fitted to the car have the size moulded into the sidewall of the tire.
However I do not know if aftermarket wheels have been put on the car and if so a different size tire from the standard factory fitment may have been fitted to the wheels.
yes you can ,no problems mechanicaly ,just make sure that the cars papers have this size tyre on options ,if not when you take vehicle for annual vehicle mechanical inspection it could fail because this tyre size is not specified on the paperwork .But this is spain and the spanish do like comida sin trabajando .
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