That depends on the axel trailer.
Depends where you are, as weight allowances are much different in various countries. For a tandem axle straight truck in the US, the max weight would be 54,000 lbs. In a dump truck, that typically equates to 13 - 15 US short tons of payload (dependent on the tare weight of the vehicle, of course). If you're referring to a tractor pulling a trailer, a standard five axle unit (steer axle, tandem drive axles, tandem or spread trailer axles) would be allowed a max gross weight of 80,000 lbs. under the federal bridge law, which, depending on the empty weight of the vehicle, could typically permit you anywhere from 20 to 25 US short tons of payload.
Depends on the specifications of the collection trucks, as well as the dimensions of the trailer, and tare weight of the vehicle. Weight wise, a transfer truck, at best, could legally haul the weight of the payload of three tandem axle collection trucks - collection trucks are quite heavy, so transfer trailers often are, as well.
i believe a tri axlw will hold about 14 yards of top soil A Tri-Axle will hold up to20 - 25 yards of soil depending on weight. A Tandem will hold about 14 - 17 yards of soil. Tri-axle can hold about 30 yards of mulch. How much it will hold, depends on the size of the box. I can 'legally' load 20 yds of 'pit-run' (gravel) in a 24 foot tandem trailer (in my province).
Depends on the boat it is designed to hold.
20,000 tons
it could hold until it drops
watch the the Simpsons
Depends on the length of the vehicle and the tare weight. Last tandem I drove, I could haul 15 tons on secondary roads, and 13-1/2 tons on the Interstate.
Legally, a tandem axle is typically good for 15 tons, give or take.
Tandem, or something/someone working in tandem, means in a row or one after another. doing the same thing. The most common example is a tandem bicycle, where two or more people are pedaling together. If you are thinking of a tandem bicycle, there is no limit as to the number of people it could be built to hold, except maybe getting people to use it.
Dump trucks come in many sizes and configurations. Additionally, vehicle weight laws vary greatly between countries. We would have to have some idea of what configuration and jurisdiction you had in mind. Configurations of dump trucks would include single axle, tandem axle, tandem axle with twin steer, tri-axle, quad axle, quint axle, centipede, tractor-trailer end dump, etc.
A typical tractor trailer unit, with a total of five axles, can typically carry between 23 and 25 tons legally, dependent on the tare weight of the tractor and trailer. The legal interstate gross weight rating for such a setup is 80,000 lbs.