If the truck and trailer are not equiped with air brakes. If the truck and trailer are not comercial vehicals.
No.
It is under the hood on the drive side. It has fins and is black
Jack up the radiator cap and drive a new truck under it
You can use drive on ramps or a floor jack under the cross-member and support it with jack stands under the frame.
First requirement - the contract driver must be properly licensed ... must have a CDL to drive a log truck.
A thin film of rust/corrosion devolops on the brake rotors when the truck sits overnite. This causes minor squeak the first time the brakes are applied when shifting into drive.
"find it in Google" -My dad
Yes, unless you fit the criteria to fall under the farm truck, recreational vehicle, military vehicle, or emergency vehicle exemptions.
You absolutely should be paid for time work driving from your office site to a work site assuming you are non-exempt under the terms of the Fair Labor Standards Act. That is, you are an hourly employee. The law does not pay one for commuting time, only for time actually working. Under the law, going from two work sites is not commuting time but work time, and you should be compensated. Under the Portal to Portal Act as amended to the Fair Labor Standards Act, you are REQUIRED to be paid. Look it up under DOL FLSA Definition of work. Personal truck Drive all the time.
it was rumored that a mew is under the truck
If you have run-flats, you can drive for up to 300 miles under 50 mph and be fine. With a typical flat tire, it is not considered safe to drive, and you should call to get a pick up truck if possible.