it is the maximum amount of weight an axle of a vehicle or trailer can carry with out damage. this is sometimes used to determine if an individual has broken the terms of a warranty.
Generally loadings and a materials performance under these loadings.
No, a steam turbine should not be operated at low loadings. This will only utilize the tips of the blades, causing twist that is outside of design parameters. You can operate this way, but the time you can do so is limited.
A relay switches heavier power loadings than a regular switch.
R. T. Buckney has written: 'Chemical loadings in a small river'
#1 axle is the steer axle, #2 axle is the front drive axle, #3 axle is the rear drive axle.
a " conventional " or " regular " axle - an axle that is not a limited slip axle
No. A tri-axle has one additional lift axle; a quad axle has two lift axles.
.357 Magnum and .38 Special (to include +P and +P+ loadings).
20 is typical. Specialized loadings might be sold in five round packages.
Roger Plank has written: 'The initial buckling of thin-walled structures under combined loadings'
There's no such thing as a one axle truck. There has to be a minimum of two axles. "Single axle" if a term referring to a truck with only a single drive axle, and doesn't count the steer axle. Same with "tandem axle", "tri axle", "quad axle", and "quint axle".
The axle housing is the main body of th axle.