Soldiers from the American Navy got bored and put a lawnmower engine to a kart.
I put my Mario kart game in the microwave for 15 seconds, based on the differences in microwaves in might be shorter and longer. This worked for me when i did this.
Sure
put it on a trailer and hook up the trailer to a car with a hitch, and pull wherever you want to.
are the tires the right size, and all the same size, how many did you replace, is it AWD, are they inflated correctly, did you break a sensor taking off or putting on the tires
Nitrogen
Soldiers from the American Navy got bored and put a lawnmower engine to a kart.
Nitrogen, because it is an inert gas.
Nitrogen It's volume changes less than air as the tires temperature changes.
Not sure what you mean by regular tires, but a 17 inch tire will fit a 17 inch rim.Not sure what you mean by regular tires, but a 17 inch tire will fit a 17 inch rim.
When it rains or snows, you will have NO traction.
Yes, you can use nitrogen or plain air.
yes
There's a great misconception about tires that says tread equals traction. While it's true on wet roads and dirt, it is not true on dry, clean pavement. Rubber gives traction, not tread. The function of tread is to cut through water, dirt, etc by channeling it into the spaces between the tread blocks to allow the rubber to meet the driving surface. This is not needed on a clean, dry race track, and tread merely reduces the amount of rubber that meets the surface and thereby reduces the contact patch. Racing slicks have no tread and therefore give far greater traction by increasing the area of the tire's contact patch on clean pavement. However, in the wet they become virtually useless because the tire can no longer make contact with the racing surface; hence "rain tires" and off-road racing tires have tread.
nitrogeon is used to inflate race car tyres due to the consistent tyre pressure throughout different tempertures.
Nitrogen would be the word you are looking for. its because the expand and the heat ratio of the nitrogen is lower then air. very good question
33-1050-15