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Back and front passenger tires are not the size that should be on vehicle. Front driver is. Bought vehicle that way.

2007-03-18 03:47:52 · 4 answers · asked by Mr W 1 in Cars & Transportation Maintenance & Repairs

4 answers

1st off, being as they are all different sizes of tires then that is probably the major source of noise.

2nd, it would probably be in your best choice to replace all tires with the proper size and rating of tires and rims to ensure that this is the only problem, otherwise you could end up replacing front bearings and not needing too.

3rd, take your car to a trusted technician to have him/her check it out by doing proper diagnostics and a proper repair.

Good luck and hope this helps.

2007-03-18 03:56:23 · answer #1 · answered by num1huckfinn 5 · 1 0

What kind of noise? Does it change ever? if so when..If it does not change while braking most likely not the brakes. If it changes during a sweeping corner could be the bearings..If it changes depending on the road that you are on could kinda be the fact that the extreme came with low profile tires.. they tend to transmit all the noise right though the truck..The fact that it has diff. size tires don't help at all. but being a 2WD should not cause noises.. Good place to start is put the right tires on it..

2007-03-18 03:59:26 · answer #2 · answered by GMGUY 2 · 0 0

num1huckfinn
is right get the right tire for your car and put them on them try and find what the noise is. The people that build the car recommend tire size for a reason.

2007-03-18 05:18:29 · answer #3 · answered by DeSaxe 6 · 0 0

drive your car on different roads and see if the noise changes.if it changes,then it must be the road.

2007-03-18 03:52:08 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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