That is what I would like to know!
Both wheels drive through a differential in the transmission.
No. At least with rear wheel drive without posi track only one rear wheel drives the vehicle. Not sure if there's a drive wheel or if both wheels pull the vehicle on a front wheel drive. It's hard to find rear wheel drive anymore. It's usually only produced now on sports/muscle car models if at all
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sounds like a front wheel drive with bad cv joints, which are your drive shafts going to both front wheels.
The 2004 Chevrolet Impala is a front-wheel-drive vehicle. This means that the engine's power is transmitted to the front wheels, which are responsible for both steering and propulsion. Rear-wheel drive would mean the power is sent to the rear wheels, and four-wheel drive would typically allow the driver to manually switch between two-wheel drive and four-wheel drive modes for better traction in certain conditions.
the drive wheel thing is a myth. both wheels pull. on a rear wheel drive car of truck many think the right wheel is the drive wheel. not true. the differential causes both wheels to pull evenly. on a rear drive the right wheel will usually spin first due to the tourque of the drive shaft. on a front wheel drive the wheel that spins first will depend on traction conditions
Yes, in vehicles with a front-wheel-drive configuration, both front axles are typically drive axles. They transfer power from the engine to the wheels, enabling them to move the vehicle. In some all-wheel-drive systems, both front axles can also serve as drive axles, providing enhanced traction and stability.
YES Some were all wheel drive. Allthough both front & rear are limited slip, & the rear only if the front wheels are spinning.
Big front wheel, which also is the drive wheel and the steering wheel and the braked wheel. Pedals permanently fixed to the axle of the front wheel. Small trailing rear wheel. Both wheels spoked, built of steel, and with solid rubber tires.
Probably means you have a "front wheel" drive car....your front tires are what make your car go, not the back. I have front wheel drive on my car and once on a rainy day...my front wheels spun out taking off from a stop sign...wierd! I hate front wheel drive cars!
No they will not.
For the drive wheels on most cars - the rear wheels on a rear-wheel drive car, or the front wheels on a front-wheel drive car. There is a "limited slip differental", a set of gears connected to the driveshaft and axles. For the non-driven wheels on your car -- the front wheels on a rear-wheel drive car, the back wheels on a front-wheel drive car -- this is not an issue. There is no connection between them, so they spin independently. But the driven wheels are linked together so that a single engine and transmission can turn both wheels. If your car did not have a differential, the wheels would have to be locked together, forced to spin at the same speed. This would make turning difficult and hard on your car: For the car to be able to turn, one tire would have to slip. With modern tires and concrete roads, a great deal of force is required to make a tire slip. That force would have to be transmitted through the axle from one wheel to another.