Hop head

| Ive seen those, some pulling a fuel trailer, also seen some trailers that the front set of tires were off the ground as well, all to reduce rolling friction I guess
https://chandlersfirearms.com/chesterfield-armament/ |
| Posts: 10869 | Location: Beach VA,not VA Beach | Registered: July 17, 2007 |  
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| As I understand it, that lifted axle can be lowered when necessary (heavy weight aboard) and lifted when the truck is unloaded — as lyman says — to reduce rolling friction (resistance). The extra-wide wheel/tire is referred to as a “super single,” — I remember asking about that arrangement here a while back. Here is an article on some pros and cons, as compared with the usual dual-wheel arrangement.
God bless America. |
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My other Sig is a Steyr.

| Also helps with load restrictions. Some roads are limited by the number of axles/tires the vehicle uses. If they are hauling empty and have the wheels/axles lifted, it allows for a better route to be available based on these restrictions. The Super Single can also make it more exciting while driving in the rain.
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| Posts: 9880 | Location: Somewhere looking for ammo that nobody has at a place I haven't been to for a pistol I couldn't live without... | Registered: December 02, 2014 |  
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| quote: Originally posted by .38supersig:
The Super Single can also make it more exciting while driving in the rain.
I'm glad I never found out. A coworker buddy jacknifed on Singles, lost the load, shut down I-75 for three hours |
| Posts: 1631 | Location: Mason, Ohio | Registered: September 16, 2015 |  
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Ammoholic
| Yeah, our ranch truck had six super singles on it when we bought it. We set it up as a rolloff and built multiple bodies for it: a 4,000 gallon water tank with motor, pump, and spray system, a trash body (20’ seatrain container with the top cut out, a 10 gauge floot welded in, and the doors chained back, a rock body with pneumatic locks and lift for the tailgate, all with a rolloff hitch on the front and rolloff rails. Only dumped a couple of loads out of the rock body with super singles on the rear two axles before I bought four rims and recapoed tires from a trucker buddy. The truvk is orders of magnitude more stable when dumping with duals on both driving axles. It’s nice having super singles on the front axle (a Fabco 20k lb, selectable driver), but I wouldn’t ever out them on the back. |
| Posts: 7562 | Location: Lost, but making time. | Registered: February 23, 2011 |  
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| quote: Originally posted by .38supersig: The Super Single can also make it more exciting while driving in the rain.
I’ve wondered about that! That big ol’ contact patch has to be great for traction in the dry, but also must suck for hydroplaning in the wet.
God bless America. |
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