Category:Conventional cab trucks

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"Conventional" cabs or normal controls where the driver is seated behind the engine, as in most passenger automobiles or pickup trucks. Many new cabs are very streamlined, with a sloped hood (bonnet) and other features to lower drag. Conventional cabs are the most common in North America, Australia, and China, and are known in the UK as "American cabs" and in the Netherlands as "torpedo cabs". Conventionals are further divided into "large car" and "aerodynamic" designs, as opposed to underneath with no nose like in a cab over engine (COE). A "large car" or "long nose" is a conventional truck with a long (6 to 8 foot (1.8 to 2.4 m) or more) hood. With their very square shapes, these trucks experience a lot of wind resistance. They typically consume more fuel. They also provide somewhat poorer visibility than their aerodynamic or COE counterparts. By contrast, Aerodynamic cabs are very streamlined. They have a sloped hood and other features to lower drag. The front doors are behind (and mostly above) the front tires. Access to a conventional cabin is commonly by steps at or near the fuel tank(s) behind the front tires. Conventional truck cabs have options that can make them as comfortable to drive as a car.

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Media in category "Conventional cab trucks"

The following 19 files are in this category, out of 19 total.