65/70 = 13/14
The 185 70 14 wil be slightly taller So if you have two of them it will most likely be alright if you have a two wheel drive car or truck. If it's four wheel drive, all four tires and wheels must be the same. You can mix sizes on two wheel drive as long as the front two are the same and the rear two are the same. The larger are more likely to fit on the rear. Not a good fit as the 185/70-14 will be taller with a larger diameter and you speedometer will be 2 mph slow at 60 mph. A much better fit if you want to go with a narrower tire would be a 175/70-14 which is almost identical in diameter.
13/14 = 26/28 = 39/42 = 52/56 = 65/70 = 78/84 . . .
13
(91/5) / (14/9) = (46/5) / (13/9) = 46/5 * 9/13 = 414/65 = 624/65
Yes , you can, as long as same tires on one axle.
Yes, as long as you change both sides of front or rear.
Please give the whole number, NOT just part of it. Whole number will be something like this - P185/60R-14 95H . IF the last number and letter are same then it is a substitute
Yes, that is a reasonable substitution.
No
No, the 185 70 r14 tire cannot be substituted for a 175 65 r14 tire. The 70 series tire has a larger diameter and is not recommended that you substitute on a 65 series tire.
No. Different diameter wheels will not accept different diameter tires. A 14 inch tire will not go on a 15 inch rim. 185 is width in mm, 65 is profile aka aspect ratio= % of width. 14 is diameter at bead and r is radial
185-60-14 or 185-65-14
Yes, this is an acceptable swap.
Please give the whole number, NOT just part of it.Whole number will be something like this - P175/65R-15 95F .If the last number and letter on your tires are the same on each pair, you have a substitute
It's either 175/65/14 or 185/65/14 depending on whether or not it is a base or LSI. The 1995 Prizm LSI has 185/65/14. It might depend on the rims you have on the car too.
13/37