If it's doing that on dry pavement, It's supposed to do that.
Trucks are rear wheel drive because they are designed to haul heavy weights in the bed. If a truck was front wheel drive, the driver would have trouble with steering, handling, and traction because the weight in the bed would unload the front suspension. However, when a truck is unloaded, the same problems can occur by having little weight on the rear of the truck (bad handling/braking when driving in wet or icy conditions). Trucks have a purpose; if you aren't going to haul anything, don't buy a truck or deal with the problems that occur when you aren't hauling anything.
You could have an ingnition control module going bad. Is it dying going down the road? If so, it more than like is the control module. If not, you could have a starter going bad, when it gets hot it won't work anymore. Good Luck!!
No, they are not authorized to cash comcheks. You would be better off going to a large truck stop.
Just put a switch in the power wire going to the coil.
trans worn out, get a newer taranny Try running the trouble codes before making exspensive repairs. It may be mass air flow sensor
Go to a truck driving school. You're not going to learn how to drive a Class 8 truck by reading about it on this website.
To drive a dump truck the type of insurance you're going to need is commercial truck insurance. But you're also going to need a special license to drive a dump truck as well. Call your insurance provider and they can probably give you more information.
Take the second left then drive straight on for a mile.Go straight to the headmistress' office now!The wine was going straight to her head.
Upon much thinking, the car will be going at 125mph relative to the earth, and 65mph relative to the truck.
There's always truck driving school, which is a bit expensive. However, if you're going to be driving a Class 8 straight truck - which tend to use unsynchronised manual transmissions, you really would be much better off going to truck driving school. If you need a Class B CDL for something like a single axle straight truck, lots of companies can do on-the-job training for this.
Need to know the exact model and configuration in order to answer this. A 26k GVW box truck and a 33K dump truck aren't going to have the same tare weight.
The u-join is probly going out
A dump truck can be anything from a 1/4 pickup to a Class 8 truck (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating of over 33,000 lbs). You're really not going to learn how to drive from reading about it on Answers.com. If you're interested in learning how to drive Class 7 and Class 8 trucks, which require a CDL, I'd recommend you attend a truck driving school.
Go to a truck driving school and learn how. Talking you through it on here isn't going to teach you how to drive one.
yes they sound like 4 wheel drive mud tires when bad you can tell what side is bad by turning the wheel slightly to the left and then right while going straight
If you're going to be operating it on public roadways, then yes.
You drive in a straight line and keep going forward.