A 225 75R 16 tire will fit on a 245 75R 16 rim. The only difference between the tires is the height of the sidewall.
yes
Yes you can
That should be OK, but check carefully for any rubbing.
That should be OK, but check carefully for any rubbing.
what is the diameter difference from a 205/65/16 vs. 225/60/16
245 and 225 are the first numbers in a tires measurement and they simply tell you how wide the tire is in mm. So a 245 is wider then a 225. But which is taller? This depends on the second number which would be something like 245/70 or 245/75 and the same goes for the 225/70 or 225/75 and there are many different combinations. This second number tells you in a percentage what the sidewall height is compared to the width which is the first number. So for a 245/70 tire it would be 70% of 245 = sidewall height, in this case that would be 171.5mm and a 245/75 would be 75% of 245 = 183.75mm so in this combination the 245/75 is taller than a 245/70. So if you had a 245/60 the sidewall height would be 60% of 245 =147mm and if you had a 225/75 the sidewall height would be 75% of 225 =168.75 which would make it taller then the 245, so as you can see it is the second number which gives you the calculation needed in order to get the height. Of course the last number in tire dimensions is the rim size such as 245/70/16 would mean it is for a 16 inch rim and this will affect overall height of the tire compared to a 245/70/15 which would go on a 15 inch rim.
205/60-16 or 245/50-16. Either of these sizes is compatable with your 225/55-16.
Absolutely not. The 45 series tire would be way too small in overall diameter. Your speedometer would read 46 mph at a true 60 mph. You are changing the overall diameter by 21% which is totally unacceptable as you should never go over or under 3%, You can install a 255/70-16 and it will work well.
Yes, they will fit.
225-60-16 radial tires
Yes you can, as long as you replace all four tires. Having different sizes tires on the vehicle will ruin the diff as the car believes it is constantly cornering, thus wearing either side at a different rate.