Mole wrote:
[Well, yeah! pretty much! Have a look at a truck carrying a really heavy load like a railway locomotive or a crane. They put lots of little wheels under the trailer! <EDIT> Multiple wheels are the next best thing to keep road damage down whilst still supporting the load and, of course, stopping it!
the main purpose of lots of small wheels is to keep the height down on the low loader. Obviously if you had large wheels,loading the locomotive would be a lot harder , and the overall height on the road would be to high to get under bridges.
another thing is axle weights unless your STGO registered ( special types goods order) , you have to comply by the gross,train and axle weights of your vehicle and the ministry, being a max of 44 tons in the UK.
most small wheeled axles are very low rated for weight , as the small tyres can't carry as much load as large tyres. Hence you see low loaders with more than the standard 3 axle configuration of its larger wheeled counterparts
A 4 axled trailer with small wheels causes more road damage than a 3 axled trailer with large ( normal size) wheels, even if they are running at the same weight. This is down to the fact that trailers dont actually follow the tractor unit round corners, the first 2/3 axles do but the last 3/4 axles just drag sideways round corners whereas the 3 axled trailer will only have 1 axle dragging . the point of pivot isnt in the middle of all the axles as you might expect.
The way round this is to have rear steering axles on the trailer, but then you reduce the load carrying capacity on the axle, as steer axles dont have the capability to bear as much load due to the moving parts for the steering.
The exception to all of the above is specialised heavy haulage trailers, the likes of the modular ones made by Cometto , which are multi units attached to each other for either length or width . these are VERY heavy duty things and also VERY expensive