The maximum weight the front axle is designed to carry.
A ten foot spread axle trailer is allowed 20,000 lbs. per axle, for a total of 40,000 lbs.
The maximum weight the front axle is designed to carry.
The maximum weight the front axle is designed to carry.
Assuming you mean "axle", an axle supports the wheel and allows the wheel to rotate.
That's talking about a vehicle, not an axle. A 6x2 vehicle has six wheel assemblies, and two are driven. So you'd be looking at three axles total (two wheel assemblies per axle), one of which would be a live axle with a differential, and the other two would be dead axles which are not driven... there'd be a steer axle, and the other dead axle could be a stationary axle, or it could be a lift axle. The powered axle could be either the forward or rear drive axle - it doesn't have to be one or the other.
no
you have to times it by 1000000000000000 and then divide be 15 then times it by 2
That's talking about a vehicle, not an axle. A 6x2 vehicle has six wheel assemblies, and two are driven. So you'd be looking at three axles total (two wheel assemblies per axle), one of which would be a live axle with a differential, and the other two would be dead axles which are not driven... there'd be a steer axle, and the other dead axle could be a stationary axle, or it could be a lift axle. The powered axle could be either the forward or rear drive axle - it doesn't have to be one or the other.
It is a Chrysler built axle with a ring gear diameter of 9.25 inches.
Two per axle.
I'm not sure if this is the same on a 2007 , but axle code 26 for 1997 to 2004 F150 trucks is a 3.73 conventional axle