Yes,that is dangerous,maybe it is true,and people took a picture before getting them booked and fined.
lol has to be photoshop, I don't think you can even stack trucks on top of each other like that without the load factor involved which could make the backend drag along the road.
I believe that it's a real picture. Those are all lightweight trucks. Those that have beds are not all the same. If it was ps'd, they took alot of time removing beds and making at least one bed different.
I think its a photoshoped image. Look at the last truck. Its left tire is inside the body of the truck, so it should be raised on the right side and tilted towards left side. Besides, manufactures don't shift vehicles like that. It will ruin the paint job, dent the body or damage glass.
The rears are wider cause they're duals. The last one looks cocked over to me. I'd say that this is the end-user of the trucks. They're going to get beat up at the job site, so this stacking doesn't matter to them.
If that's for real, i think it's pretty dangerous! What if a few trucks fall off on the vehicle behind it! Bye-Bye vehicle!
One of the following is true (you guess which is the one) 1. The Chinese are real geniuses 2. Like most things we come across in India, the stacked trucks are sub standard and made of plastic (which makes the lighter!) 3. OMG Chinese are soooooo good at Photoshop, Adobe should immidietally pursue expansion plans // shift their HQs to Shanghai! 4. There exists a thing called a crane which can do this!
The mud flap has JAC on it. I Googled JAC Truck China and found this. From http://www.made-in-china.com/showro...tQltxLk/China-SHAZHOU-3-Ton-Diesel-Truck.html It looks like a newer version of the truck in the OP. Yes they are made in China.