It means that his has two steering axles at the front and a single fixed axle at the rear. I have no idea why it's called "Chinese Six" however!
I used to drive them back in the late 1950's for BRS, the 4 wheels at the front all steered.
As I had noted previously it sounded like the one I knew Richard Dixon in Ireland owned, I see he is now given as the contact, very nice fella and a Lancisti to boot
Found this explanation of the name and I would certainly agree with the comment about 6's in a straight line.
gnasty gnome wrote:I'd guess that it originates as a vernacular way of describing anything that was "back to front" in the 1920's/30's, when that type of vehicle was first built.
Dunno then? RepliedThis to my knowledge is accurate. Back then the "wrong" way of doing things was the "chinese" way . They just looked wrong with 2 axles at the front and 1 at the rear? My view is that perhaps they were trying to get away from the tendancy of the conventional sixes to go in a straight line,no matter what you did with the wheel!
Brian
8227