Both front tires directly back to the rear on the same side they were on. Then RR tire to LF, LR tire to RF.
Non-Directional Tires: Front same side to Rear; Rear criss-cross to Front. Directional Tires: Front to Rear & Rear to Front same side. Do Not Criss-Cross. Ref: Subaru Service Bulletin # 05-37-07.....
Unless the tires are directional (indicated by an arrow on the sidewall), radial tires can be cross rotated. On FWD vehicles the front tires are moved straight back and the rear tires are crossed to the front. On RWD vehicles the rear tires are moved straight to the front and the front tires are crossed to the rear.
You cannot rotate tires on a vehicle when the rear tires are wider than the front. They must stay where they are,
Rotate tires 2 front 225 and 2 back 245
Tires should be rotated every 7500 miles for good even tire wear and tire life. Remeber only rotate tires front to back on the same side of the car....no cross rotations. Example: right front goes to right rear..... left front tire goes to left rear and vice versus.
You can rotate them two different ways. Back to back, always keeping the tires on the same side of the car is one way. But the preferred method to rotate them is to move the front tires directly to the rear keeping them on the same side of the car as they were installed on as in, RF to RR, and LF to LR. Then take the rear tires and move the RR to the LF, and the LR to the RF.
DIRECTIONAL tires stay on the same side of the vehicle Front to rear , rear to front
cross X-pattern diagonally across the car
front to back
more than likely, its the front tires if a front wheel drive.
Front to back, no. Side to side, yes. If the tires are directional, no.
Does it pull to the side? It may be your tires. Bad tires. Flat spot on the front tires. Try to rotate your tires. And see what happeneds.