No. The Ford L9000 (which the Aeromax was a variation of) was taken out of production in... 1995 or 1996, if I remember correctly... that division of Ford was sold to Daimler A.G., who continued producing the AT and LT series of trucks under the Sterling marque until they discontinued the production line in 2009.
ATF
It is a type of truck that were made 1960-2010 and still.
That depends upon the frame size and the number of tires. if you look on maufacturers plate on inside of door, u will see what the gvw is that is if it is 1.5 ton truck the gvw will be 3000 pounds [more than the tare weight] so you can go grom there. the side of the truck will say what class it is a Ford f450 or GMC or dodge 4500 is a class 4 truck a Ford F250 dodge or GMC 2500 is a class 2 truck a GMC 6500 or Ford F650 is a class 6 truck. class 7 & 8 truck require a CDL to drive * Class 1 (gvw 0-6,000) * Class 2 (gvw 6,001-10,000) * Class 3 (gvw 10,001-14,000) * Class 4 (gvw 14,001-16,000) yes it is * Class 5 (gvw 16,001-19,500) * Class 6 (gvw 19,501-26,000) * Class 7 (gvw 26,001-33,000) * Class 8 (gvw 33,001-150,000)
No. There was a Ford F800, but Ford sold their Class 7 and Class 8 truck manufacturing rights to Daimler A.G. in 1997 (they were manufactured under the Sterling marque thereafter).
It is bacicly the more high class ford pickup
I believe that a Ford F650 requires a class B license to drive.
The Ford F-550 is a Class 5 "medium duty" truck. Despite its Class 5 rating, it shares many of its parts with lighter duty pickup models manufactured by Ford.
No. Although they dropped out of that market in North America in 1997, Ford still manufactures heavy duty trucks for the South American markets (the F650 is a medium duty truck).
Ford trucks are better than Dodge trucks. Over years Ford trucks will last longer than Dodge. Today 20 year old Ford truck still driving on the road.
Anywhere from 20 to 300. A Class 8 truck is simply a truck with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating in excess of 33,000 lbs. Not just tandem axle trucks, but, as an example, the current production Ford F750 falls into the Class 8 category.
The strongest pickup truck is the Ford F-150. The Ford F-150 has the strongest frame in its class which allows for class-leading towing and payload. The 5.4L Triton V8 engine is the weakest of all of its competitors but the truck is built stronger and better so it has so many class-leading stats like towing at 11,300 pounds or payload at 4,030 pounds.
The 1956 Ford Truck is in fact considered a collectible. The reasons for that is the small amount of produced Ford cars in 1956 and the even smaller amount of cars that are still remaining today.