Tire size confusion

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Something Epic, Apr 29, 2025.

  1. Something Epic

    Something Epic Bobtail Member

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    IMG_1230.jpeg IMG_1229.jpeg Hey all. Thanks for reading. Ive got a question and, i gotta be honest, i feel stupid for asking this. But i'm confused ah right now;

    When it comes to commercial-truck tires, can 295/75r22.5 tires go on a truck when the truck-info sheet on the doorframe says to use 275/80r22.5?
    Im looking at a truck-for-sale listing. The doorframe says to use 275/80r22.5 but the truck currently has 295/75r22.5 tires. Are the 295/75s the wrong-size? Or can they be used (assuming all the tires are the same size)?
     
    Last edited: Apr 29, 2025
    Reason for edit: Cropped pictures
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  3. Something Epic

    Something Epic Bobtail Member

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    Sep 1, 2023
    California
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    Fixed og-post (i hope)
     
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  4. D.Tibbitt

    D.Tibbitt Road Train Member

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    Yes you can put on whatever tires you want. Those tires are practically the same exact things
     
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  5. Moosetek13

    Moosetek13 Road Train Member

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    The 295/75 has a wider aspect ratio than the 275/80, but I think they are both the same circumference. Meaning, the change is fine and won't cause any problems. The wider 295/75 is probably better in most circumstances.
     
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  6. Rideandrepair

    Rideandrepair Road Train Member

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    80r is just a bit wider than 75r. Often used in RV’s I believe. I’ve ran them on my trailer a few times, alongside a 75r.
     
  7. Rideandrepair

    Rideandrepair Road Train Member

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    One of us has it backwards. Probably me. I’m always wrong. Lol.
     
  8. Moosetek13

    Moosetek13 Road Train Member

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    The aspect ratio of a tire is the percentage of width to height.
    An 80 is a very tall and skinny tire while a 50... well, look at a sports car tire size. Short and wide.
     
    Last edited: Apr 29, 2025
  9. Rideandrepair

    Rideandrepair Road Train Member

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    I wasn’t just wrong.I was really wrong. Only thing exactly the same IS the width.
     
  10. Rideandrepair

    Rideandrepair Road Train Member

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    Looks like your speedometer and tach will read 2.9% lower than it would with the original tires. So at 69 mph on speedo your actual speed will be 71 mph, if it hasn’t been recalibrated.
     
  11. ducnut

    ducnut Road Train Member

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    Taller aspect ratio; not wider.

    Aspect ratio, or sidewall height, is a percentage of the tire width.
     
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