Chassis configuration
The chassis configuration is a formula that gives information about the wheels of a road vehicle including number of wheels, number of driven wheels and number of steered wheels. A common example is 4x4.
Formula
The formula is defined as follows:A × B / C
or
A × B * C
with:
- A = number of wheels
- B = number of driven wheels
- / = the fore of the rear axles is steered
- * = the rearmost of the rear axles is steered
- C = number of steered wheels
- - = separates axle groups and/or different axle functions
Often the formula A × B × C is used. Even if the information contained by C is needless, it means that only front axles are steered. This can give information about the distribution of axles. For example, provide manufacturers the chassis configuration 8×4×4 to show that the vehicle has two steered front axles and two driven rear axles, compared to the chassis configuration 8×4/4 where the vehicle has one steered front axle, one steered rear axle and two driven rear axles.