Yes the 60 is just the height of the tyre as long as it is the same inch tyre (16) and same tyres are fitted in pairs front or rear axle.
There is no such example. If you cannot use an exact fraction then there will not be an exact decimal that you can use instead. And, if you are using an approximate decimal, you could use an approximate fraction instead.
losers
i forgot
Use brackets when you are creating a parenthetical within a parenthetical.
The 2008 Mitsubishi Outlander comes standard with P215/70R16 size tires. You may or may not be able to use a P225/75/R16, but anything larger than that wouldn't fit into the wheel well.
If the the two vehicles normmal tires are the same size; yes. Size is displayed on the tires as follows: Example; P215 65 R16; the size for a 2000 Odessy (yes i looked it up). there are several different tire sizes for the 2006 odessy, (P235 65 R16, P225 65 R16, among others) so perhaps not an option.
no you cannot
no you cannot
no you cannot
Yes you can
YesYes
a 15 x 6.5 or a 16x 6.5 tire sizes would be a P205/70R/15, P215/60R/16, or a P225/60R16
You may use that size, yet however the accuracy of your speedometer will be less accurate (if used on front wheels).
Yes, you can.
Dodge Journey is one vehicle that uses the P225/70R16.
Yes the 60 is just the height of the tyre as long as it is the same inch tyre (16) and same tyres are fitted in pairs front or rear axle.