Go to tirerack.com and enter the information about your car. That will take you to a page with a "tire decision guide" The page will ask you questions about your driving habits and what is most important to you regarding tread life, road noise, and handling.
Once you've done that pick the category of tires and after a bit of clicking you can find a list of all the tires that will fit and how literally thousands of people have rated the various tires, the link below is for the ultra high performance category.
I've used this process for every set of tires purchased in the past couple of years and have always been satisfied with the result.
2007-03-11 04:30:50
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answer #1
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answered by Signed 2
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If you are planning on buying a bigger tire, be prepared to spend a lot of money. I bought a 2006 Jeep Wrangler, which had 4 ply tires (crappy tires), p225, 75/R15. I drive dirt roads daily, so I went to get a 6 ply tire that wouldn't go flat on a daily basis. However, the 6 ply didn't come in the p225, so I had to go with p235. Not much of a difference right? Wrong. The bigger tire confused the computer that runs the tranny, so I started getting crappy gas mileage and the odometer was off. I put 95.2 miles on the jeep, daily, and after the new tires it read, 92.3. Not much of a difference, but a big difference in the long run. The part to fix my jeep is cheap $12, but the labor is outrageous. If your outlander has a computer chip in it, it will need to be replaced. Just a heads up.
2007-03-11 11:09:36
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answer #2
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answered by FireBug 5
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Discount Tire
2007-03-11 10:58:14
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answer #3
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answered by hop-a-longmd 1
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The best place to get reasonable tires are Sears, Walmart and Sams Club.
2007-03-11 10:57:12
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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No, but any good tire shop with a half way decent inventory should be able to help you out.
2007-03-11 10:58:48
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answer #5
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answered by oklatom 7
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