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Driving Wheels
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Assignment 9, Continued
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Equipment Operator Basic - Beginning construction equipment operators manual
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Steering Mechanisms

Its purpose is to help in distributing the load on the rear of the vehicle to the two live axles that it connects. The  three  types  of  live  axles  that  are  used  in automotive and construction equipment are as follows: semifloating,  three-quarter  floating,  and  full  floating. DRIVING  WHEELS Wheels attached to live axles are the driving wheels. Wheels attached to the outside of the driving wheels make  up  dual  wheels.  Dual  wheels  give  more  traction to the driving wheels and distribute the weight of the vehicle over more surface. Consider dual wheels as single wheels in describing vehicles. The number of wheels is sometimes used to identify equipment; for example, a 4 by 2 could be a passenger car or a truck with four wheels, two of them driving. On a 4 by 4 (fig. 2-18), power is delivered to the transfer case where it is divided between the front and rear axle, allowing all four wheels to drive. A 6 by 4 truck with dual wheels in the rear is identified by six wheels, four of which drive. When a live axle is in front, the truck becomes a 6 by 6 (fig. 2-19), in which all six wheels drive. Figure  2-19.—Six-wheeled  drive  transmission. 2-13

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