It could if it has a solid front axle. If it has independent front suspension it would not.
A truck is normally driven from the front.
you can see the front of the truck in your rear-view mirror.
you can see the front of the truck in your rear-view mirror.
need more information, but it could be a frozen caliper or a collapsed brake line
I believe it is called the front or the nose
is it illegal to drive with an infant in the front seat of a truck
changing front brake pads on 1991 Toyota truck
You should see both headlights of the truck in your rearview mirror before you pull in front of it.
Front shocks. You may feel what I could describe as an "UP" bounce feel. If you replace the front shocks this will minimize that feel. However, the Frontier front suspension is quite "bouncy" good truck.
It could be the U joints from the transfer case causing the problem.
True