No. It will not effect speedometer accuracy.
If the vehicle is front wheel drive, yes.
Probably means you have a "front wheel" drive car....your front tires are what make your car go, not the back. I have front wheel drive on my car and once on a rainy day...my front wheels spun out taking off from a stop sign...wierd! I hate front wheel drive cars!
The powered tires. On a front wheel drive car, the front wheels. On rear wheel drive, the rear wheels.
Just peel out and see which tires spin! I'll save you the wear on your tires, it's front wheel drive.
Only on a front wheel drive vehicle. On a rear wheel drive the rear tires wear faster. rotate your tires every 10,000 miles and they will wear evenly.
more than likely, its the front tires if a front wheel drive.
ONLY the front tires can spend on a non-all wheel front end driven car.
If all wheel drive, yes. If front wheel drive, no. Only the front tires have to be off the ground.
Front wheel drive. The weight of the engine puts pressure on the front tires giving you more traction to the tires that not only propel the vehicle but also steer the vehicle.
Front wheel drive
Rear
always cross to the power. ie-front wheel drive. back tires cross to the front. and visa-versa for rear wheel drive. 4x4-cross in an x pattern.