Here in the great state of Michigan in the good old USA we can haul up to 74,390 Kilograms (that's 164,000 pounds in freedom units) without a permit. Might be why our roads are so bad. 

of course rural population plays a big roll. But roads(rougher asphalt) and wheelbaseIT's not relevant because your weights are dictated by your small rural population. In any case in the US they still spec HDEO oils. The same HDEO oils which are used in heavy equipment (Earth Movers)
Come on now. GVWR maximum in Alberta is 53500kg. Sweden is 64000kg.
Well, over here in bald eagle freedom land, those Mickey Mouse euro derived diesels carry the more stringent specs, which is what you asked.
How many Scanias do you own? Looking out my driveway I can see four “light duty” diesel pickups of >400 hp each. They’re more common here than VW golf’s in your neck of the woods. Freedommobiles. George Washington himself crossed the Potomac in a deleted, second gen swapped Cummins megacab.
And our semis have two axles in the back because they’re heavy duty.
Does amsoil ship do euro continent?
74k kg is lightweight, so you sit downHere in the great state of Michigan in the good old USA we can haul up to 74,390 Kilograms (that's 164,000 pounds in freedom units) without a permit. Might be why our roads are so bad.
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Those are about equal in understanding.Jsut so you all know, i dont care at all about whatever country pulls. All i wanted to know what spec is the best if anyones knows. Just like we all know Sweden and Finland pulls the heaviest![]()
Yes, but the truck bearly takes any load there since it only have 3 axels. You have a trailer with 8 axels carrying most of it, which explains the length of it. Do US semis have air suspension? how about axel lift? Just curious
I think the most popular non US brand is Volvo - many of them on the road in the USA …https://www.scania.com/content/dam/...ces/scania-oil/Scania_Oil_Technical_Paper.pdf
Scanias "tech" paper.
https://www.trailer.se/artikel/scania-planerar-produktion-av-longline
I would not be very surprised if Scania tries to sell the coming Longline cab in the states, or something like it in the next decade.
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Where I am - see them between class 4 and 8. Would seem market share is increasing … German parent co now ?How about International/Navistar ?
Medium sized delivery trucks up the the “18 wheeler” … the most common class 8 is Frieghtliner … (bought by Daimler)I have no clue what class 4 or class 8 is![]()
I know you're in heavy industry worldwide.I’m in the EU in a shipyard bcs I’m in heavy industry worldwide - the equipment we move (by many means) is large, heavy, expensive, long lead, and dangerous to move.
Nobody engages in testosterone wars - otherwise people get killed. That truck does not need excessive loads on his axles for bragging rights. We have moved over 100 million lbs a short distance but not on highways crossing bridges. That’s why nobody gets stupid with OTR trucks - bridges with axle ratings and axle distance/spacing under permits …
Subject was oil. Yes, the same Delvac/CAT oil can be used in LT and heavy equipment …
Bonus: Want some fun start comparing land mass and road networks
But you equated largest load carried with most stringent oil spec, which shows an ignorance of the machinery involved. Small machinery can be just as demanding on lube properties, or more.Jsut so you all know, i dont care at all about whatever country pulls. All i wanted to know what spec is the best if anyones knows. Just like we all know Sweden and Finland pulls the heaviest![]()