Let me have a crack at it: aspect ratio is the height of the tire from the ground to the bead expressed as a percentage of the width (as measured at the outmost edge of the sidewalls). A 60 series tire would be 60% as high as it is wide. Higher series (eg. 70, 80) are taller relative to width, lower series (35, 40) are shorter relative to width. (Hmm, I guess you just said all that - oh well).
I think aspect ratios go as low as 25 and as high as 85. Twenty five series would look like rubber bands stretched around a coffee can, handle like the car was on rails, and destroy your rims the first decent pothole you hit. Eighty-five series would have a crazy amount of sidewall flex - definitely not a performance tire. /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
There's a great book that the tire shops use - I got a year-old one that was about to be chucked (car & truck tires only - no tractors). Full of great info - OEM tire sizes, optional tire sizes, lug patterns, wheel nut torques, rims sizes and offsets (5.5J. 5.5JJ, 6J etc.), speed ratings, rotation patterns, approved rim widths for different width tires, who makes what "house" brand of tire, load and inflation tables, how to decode all the little abbreviations stamped on sidewalls, all the good stuff. It's just called (Year) Tire Guide, Bennett Garfield Publication, Boca Raton, FL. 561-997-9229. $10.95/copy (maybe a little more now), or as I say, see if you can mooch an older copy from your tire guy.
Enjoy, it's a real page-turner, I couldn't put it down!
***Spoiler warning - the nail did it.) /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif