I think we're in agreement here, rb1957. I think I misunderstood your statement "put the load where it belongs" to imply that analyzing a single load position was sufficient. By the time I figured out that's not what you were advocating, it had become a debate.
As hoshang suggested, the trucks need to be applied as moving loads, occupying multiple different transverse 'lanes', both individually, and with multiple trucks on the bridge. Combining multiple trucks is no simple task, since each assumed to be a 10' wide loading pattern within a 12' wide lane, assuming that the lanes may be striped anywhere. This is why typical bridge design applies wheel fractions or distribution factors to a girder line analysis. That probably won't work here.
Rod Smith, P.E., The artist formerly known as HotRod10