check the Power Steering fluid... if its low... there's ure problem... if not... u might look into getting a new pump...
The back wheels are the only wheels that actually move. The front wheels are the wheels that steer.
steer into the slide.
check power steering fluid level. Also check belt.
5 - 4 to drive and one to steer
it allows the wheels to swivel so the driver can steer
Yes, as long as you have clearance for the front wheels to steer.
Over-steer is the handling of an automotive vehicle that causes turns that are sharper than the driver intends because the rear wheels slide to the outside of the turn before the front wheels lose traction.
Some farm tractors that have small wheels in the front and larger wheels in the back is to help farmers pull larger equipment. The large tires have more traction and the smaller wheels help to steer.
Let your foot off the gas pedal and steer gradually back onto the road.
It is more difficult to steer with big tires, they are smaller so they are managable, also the weight on a tractor and traction is needed in the rear
"18 wheeler" referred to tractor-trailer units with a total of five axles (four wheels per drive and trailer axle plus two wheels on the steer axle = 18 wheels). However, it has become a common expression for tractor-trailer units in general, whether or not they have 18 wheels.
Three wheeled cars are a complete failure, they cant steer propely, they roll etc..., two wheeled cars are already called bikes, and four or possibly more wheels are cars.