2
Normally two.
depends on if the car is front wheel drive or rear wheel drive. If it is FWD, it will have a axle for each front wheel, if RWD, it still has 2 axles but they are housed in the cars rear end............hope this helps
Yes, assuming the car has four wheels, four-wheel-drive is the same thing as all-wheel-drive. Not always, four wheel drive provides a positive lock between the front and rear axles. All wheel drive has a differential between them most of the time.
Look underneath to see which axles have driveshafts
if its front wheel drive its the C V joints in the axles
The engine, transaxle and axles (half-shafts).
If it is a thumping and a front wheel drive car, it is probably one of the axles.
If it is a front wheel drive car then the axels are in the front. Just look behind the front wheels and you will see them. If it is a rear wheel drive, then thay are in the back inclosed in the rear end housing.
4-wheeled cars have 4 axles. Depending on the type of drive-train that the car uses, some of the axles might only be stub axles or hubs, and some axles might be referred to as 'spindles', but they are all, 'axles', nonetheless.
Basically, no. It would be much easier to just buy an all wheel drive car.
The transfer case is a gear box found in 4-wheel and all-wheel drive vehicles. It receives power from the transmission and sends it to both front and rear axles.