No,NO,NO, The NUT that's on the front axel is what holds the WHEEL BEARING TOGETHER. IT has to be there.
A dump truck with two drive axles.
A tandem truck is a truck with two drive axles.
A quad axle dump truck is a tandem axle dump truck, with additional lifting pusher and/or tag axles. The most common configuration is two steerable lift axles in front of the drive tandems, although some will have one pusher in front of the tandems, and a tag behind the tandems.
A quad axle dump truck is a tandem axle dump truck, with additional lifting pusher and/or tag axles. The most common configuration is two steerable lift axles in front of the drive tandems, although some will have one pusher in front of the tandems, and a tag behind the tandems.
Three - the two drive axles, and the steer axle.
A truck with two or more rear axles, both with with diffs coupled by a jack shaft. Some units fitted with diff locks to allow one or both axles to drive.
It's a dump truck with four axles--the steer axle in front and three axles in back. One of them moves up and down via a control in the cab, so the tires aren't on the road if the truck's not loaded. A tri-axle dump truck carries more weight than a one-axle or two-axle truck.
if the rear end is messed up you can if you take the rear drive shaft out. but you have to keep the 4wd engaged. it will run of the front axles that way. i wouldn't drive very long that way, but it will get you home.
Varies according to wheelbase of the power unit, and the bridge length between the drive axles and trailer axles.
Probley have a bad 4x4 Actuator in the front left side of the differential HOUSING. It is towards the center of the housing on the left when standing in the front of the truck.
A truck with three axles,(1 steering and 2 drive axles) is called a tandem.A trailer with 3 axles is called a tridem or a triaxle depending on the spacing between the axles.Number of axles is not specific to any one manufacture.
Your best method is simply to scale it out on a set of certified scales, which can be found at truck stops. The printout from these scales will give you individual readings for your steer, drive, and trailer axles.