Service manual

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The tire has a puncture, cut, or other damage that can’t be repaired
well because of the size or location of the damage.
Buying
New
Tires
To find out what kind and size of tires you need, look at the Tire-Loading
Information label.
The tires installed on your vehicle when it was new had a Tire
Performance Criteria Specification (TPC Spec) number on each tire’s
sidewall. When you get new tires, get ones with that same TPC Spec
number. That way, your vehicle will continue to have tires that are
designed to give proper endurance, handling, speed rating, traction, ride
and other things during normal service on your vehicle.
If
your tires have
an all-season tread design, the TPC number will be followed by a
“MS”
(for mud and snow).
If
you ever replace your tires with those not having a
TPC
Spec number,
make sure they are the same size, load range, speed rating and
construction type (bias, bias-belted or radial) as your original tires.
I
Mixing
tires could
cause
you
to
lose control
while
driving.
If
you
mix
tires
of
different
sizes
or
types
(radial
and bias-belted
tires),
the vehicle
may
not handle
properly,
and
you
could
have
a
crash.
Be
sure
to use the same
size
and
type
tires
on
all
wheels.
It’s
all
right
tlol
drive
with
your
compact
spare,
though.
It
was
developed
for
limited use
on
your
vehicIe.
Uniform
Tire
Quality Grading
The following information relates to the system developed by the United
States National Highway Traffic Safety Administration which grades tires
by treadwear, traction and temperature performance. (This applies only
to vehicles sold in the United States.)
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