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  2. Sisu Axles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sisu_Axles

    The brakes used on rigid axles are predominantly S-cam type; the heavier steering axles are equipped with wedge brakes. The independent suspension systems are for 6×6, 8×8 and 10×10 layouts with 6 to 8 tonnes capacity per axle. The brakes are either disc or wedge type. [8]

  3. Timoney Technology Limited of Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timoney_Technology_Limited...

    Timoney Technology Limited of Ireland is an Irish company which designs, develops and manufactures powertrains and independent suspension systems for heavy duty trucks, motor coaches and military vehicles. Timoney designs and develops a variety of standard armoured and soft skin mobility systems for military, commercial and specialist ...

  4. Swing axle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_axle

    Another use of the swing axle concept is Ford's "Twin I-Beam" front suspension for trucks. This system has solid axles, and may transmit power in four-wheel-drive versions, where it is called "Twin Traction Beam". It is an independent suspension system, as each tyre rises and falls without affecting the position of the other.

  5. Oshkosh TAK-4 Independent Suspension System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oshkosh_TAK-4_Independent...

    Oshkosh remains the market leader as of 2024 for independent suspension systems above the 5000 kg threshold, almost exclusively for large commercial vehicles, and excluding Striker and Pierce products, has equipped in the region of 30,000 military vehicles with the TAK-4 independent suspension system set-up. [5]

  6. Independent suspension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_suspension

    Many vehicles also have an independent rear suspension (IRS). IRS, as the name implies, has the rear wheels independently sprung. A fully independent suspension has an independent suspension on all wheels. Some early independent systems used swing axles, but modern systems use Chapman or MacPherson struts, trailing arms, multilink, or wishbones.

  7. Why an independent rear suspension for GM's new, full-sized ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-independent-rear-suspension...

    A Motor Trend report last month laid out how Cadillac's 4.2-lier twin-turbo Blackwing V8 could be an orphan due to cost concerns in the GM empire. Last-minute chassis changes to Cadillac's new ...