Two daft truck/lorry questions

Two daft truck/lorry questions

Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
Hi guys

I have 2 questions if I may

1) The really big trucks on the road will often have 6 wheels on the trailer, I only normally see 4 of them in contact with the road with the other pair normally the front pair lifted off the ground, why are they there

2) Coming back from a meeting today around the M25 I saw a truck with 2 cabs on its bed, one was
facing the rear and looked quite funky with modern lights and all in white, the other had parts covered up and was covered in the black and white camp stuff that car makers use to try and disguise new models, are they as secretive about trucks too?

powerstroke

10,283 posts

161 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Yes !!!volvo merc etc dont want daf scania seeing what they are up to or the truck buyers seeing a new model before they have got rid of the old models just like cars.
2 The axles are lifted to save fuel and reduce wear on empty or lightly loaded trailers.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
powerstroke said:
Yes !!!volvo merc etc dont want daf scania seeing what they are up to or the truck buyers seeing a new model before they have got rid of the old models just like cars.
2 The axles are lifted to save fuel and reduce wear on empty or lightly loaded trailers.
thumbup

Cheers I think these were Fords, they didn't have badges on but there was a whacking great oval hole where a badge should go

Ah makes sense cheers

martin mrt

3,774 posts

202 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
Unlikely to be fords in this country.

R0G

4,987 posts

156 months

Wednesday 25th July 2012
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
1 - can be lifted or lowered depending on the load weight also lifted when light to save on tyre wear
2 - yes, just as secretive

Nickyboy

6,700 posts

235 months

Wednesday 25th July 2012
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Container trucks possibly?

The trailer splits in 2 so 2 20ft containers can be dropped for unloading at the same time

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
Nickyboy said:
Container trucks possibly?

The trailer splits in 2 so 2 20ft containers can be dropped for unloading at the same time
It could be, but more likely a standard 3+3 combination imho. As mentioned you can raise them via a button on the side of the trailer. If the tractor unit is a 3 axle one then usually the non-driven axle at the back can be raised via a button in the cab. It's a slightly better ride, corners better if the tractor unit axle is raised and saves on fuel/wear. spin

philmots

4,632 posts

261 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
^ in the case of a tag axle, yes..

Most 6 leg units in the UK have a lift axle which is the middle one which lifts when running light.. The drive axle is the furthest back.

They're pretty keen on us running with the lift up.. IIRC you can be at 40T before the axle automatically drops. If you run with them down light or more so lots of manoeuvring in tight yards etc you can scrub a set of middle tyres off in a few weeks!

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
philmots said:
The drive axle is the furthest back.
Not always, Phil.. wink Most of the fleet-y type artics here in the UK have a pusher axle (what we usually refer to as a mid lift) but you can also spec them with a tag axle which is behind the driven axle and often steers and/or lifts too.

Scania with tag axle for illustration purposes. spin

philmots

4,632 posts

261 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
Sorry for causing confusion. I realise there's an option for a tag axle with drive being the middle.

From my last post.....
[quote=me]^ in the case of a tag axle, yes..[\quote]

They're just very rare compared to a middle lift..

Always seem to be on trucks that you'd see on more off road use. Like the Biomass Stobart ones. I've not driven one so can't comment on their behaviour other than they must have an uber tight turning circle when lifted.

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
philmots said:
r causing confusion. I realise there's an option for a tag axle with drive being the middle.

From my last post.....
me said:
^ in the case of a tag axle, yes..[\quote]

They're just very rare compared to a middle lift..

Always seem to be on trucks that you'd see on more off road use. Like the Biomass Stobart ones. I've not driven one so can't comment on their behaviour other than they must have an uber tight turning circle when lifted.
Yes they do, can turn them on a sixpence tongue out. Ride tends to be rather choppy vs a conventional mid lift layout because of the short wheel base with the tag raised, though. smile

philmots

4,632 posts

261 months

Friday 27th July 2012
quotequote all
Is there any other reason for that layout though other than the turning? Any traction benefits?

We have a handful of 4x2 and they make it a lot easier in very tight places.

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Saturday 28th July 2012
quotequote all
philmots said:
Is there any other reason for that layout though other than the turning? Any traction benefits?

We have a handful of 4x2 and they make it a lot easier in very tight places.
Honesty don't know Phil! Only driven a couple (both on plant work) and to be honest never really paid any attention to it. Don't quote me but I think the 5th wheel is generally nearer to the middle axle on a 6 legger than the back axle so maybe there are some traction benefits? scratchchin

4key

10,784 posts

149 months

Saturday 28th July 2012
quotequote all
Just for a giggle..

Most steering lift axles are physically connected in some way, Iveco has some dodgy electronic pump system. This is what happens if you try to go lock to lock fully freighted, say whenever you are trying to do a stupidly tight maneuver with lots of pedestrians watching or holding up traffic hehe


philthy

4,689 posts

241 months

Sunday 29th July 2012
quotequote all
4key said:
Just for a giggle..

Most steering lift axles are physically connected in some way, Iveco has some dodgy electronic pump system. This is what happens if you try to go lock to lock fully freighted, say whenever you are trying to do a stupidly tight maneuver with lots of pedestrians watching or holding up traffic hehe

I just put my fingers in my ears when I saw that hehe

TwoHats

258 posts

144 months

Tuesday 31st July 2012
quotequote all
philmots said:
^ in the case of a tag axle, yes..

Most 6 leg units in the UK have a lift axle which is the middle one which lifts when running light.. The drive axle is the furthest back.

They're pretty keen on us running with the lift up.. IIRC you can be at 40T before the axle automatically drops. If you run with them down light or more so lots of manoeuvring in tight yards etc you can scrub a set of middle tyres off in a few weeks!
The Axors we run with a non steering mid lift also have issues with the wheel bearings failing on the lift axle due to too much manoeuvring with the axle dropped.

4key

10,784 posts

149 months

Wednesday 1st August 2012
quotequote all
philthy said:
I just put my fingers in my ears when I saw that hehe
The trick i found, is not to stop. If you are always moving it doesnt trip over itself. Not so easy when you have to do a couple of shunts on a slope to reverse through a gate smile

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Wednesday 1st August 2012
quotequote all
4key said:
The trick i found, is not to stop. If you are always moving it doesnt trip over itself. Not so easy when you have to do a couple of shunts on a slope to reverse through a gate smile
I'll always remember trying to reverse a 40ft rear steer curtain side trailer without locking the axle first. Much chuckling from all the onlookers stood in the yard.. irkedhehe

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Thursday 2nd August 2012
quotequote all
I have 2 more if I may (I should explain I have a new job which involves regular client visits so I am spending a lot of time stationary on various motorways around the UK)

So today I was about 10 cars back from a lorry that essentially shat one of its rear tyres all over the place, cue lots of heavy braking as people tried to avoid the huge section of tyre left on the road and we all stopped to allow the driver to nip across and grab it from the 3rd lane where it ended up

It was the tyre from his trailer and he made it onto the hard shoudler, as I continued my journey I noticed other bits of lorry tyre on the hard shoulder in various places, so are lorry tyres a bit st? Or is it we only notice these bits cos they are huge and it seems more often as there are loads of lorries


Also years ago I saw on a technology program of some sort a device a guy had invented that was a frame with 2 small wheels when a lorry slammed on the brakes this dropped down and seemed to act as a sort of anchor reducing the stopping distance massively they were projecting this would be fitted to loads of trailers and would stop a lot of accidents but I have never seen one since

Anyone know what I am talking about?

Feel free if these questions are getting boring to tell me to do one I just find it all facinating

All that jazz

7,632 posts

147 months

Thursday 2nd August 2012
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Trailer tyres take a lot of abuse from bad drivers and neglect :

- Drivers that don't take corners and turns wide enough resulting in the trailer tyres being compressed against the kerb and smacking them into the kerb face and over the top. From what I've seen most truckers have absolutely no mechanical sympathy whatsoever for the truck or trailer.

- Drivers screwing the trailer round on its axis in tight yards through sheer laziness. Especially bad when the trailer is fully loaded. On a 44 tonner each trailer tyre will be supporting nearly 4 tonnes of weight.

- Drivers neglecting to check the tyre pressures. This is probably the biggest factor in blow outs.