The Gross Vehicle Weight Rating is determined by the weight rating of the chassis and the axles. A typical road tractor will have drive axles rated at 40k (total) and a steer axle rated between 12 and 13k. Weight rating and legal weight limit under the bridge law are not one in the same, keep in mind.
52,000 lbs., assuming you have 40k rears and a 20k steer. What you'd be allowed to gross legally if you converted it to a straight truck will depend on wheelbase.
Gross weight or loaded weight is 80,000 lbs. Empty weight differs greatly depending on different tractor and trailer configurations but is around 36,000 lbs for a tractor and dry van trailer
No way to answer without knowing the model, axle weight ratings, and wheelbase.
For a standard five axel tractor trailer, the max is 80,000 lbs
80,000 lbs. After that, an oversize permit is required.
It's a trick question - gross weight is the loaded weight. The weight of an empty vehicle would be the tare weight. This would depend on exactly what model International it was, as well as the configuration (single axle, tandem, tri-axle, 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.
48,000 lbs total
The answer depends on which altec bucket truck you look at. For example the Altec AA755 MH- 2004 International 4300 Bucket Truck has a gross weight of 33.000 lbs but the ALtec AM855- 1998 International 4900 4x4 Bucket Truck has a gross weight off 39.000lbs. But on average the bucket trucks are around the 30.000 lbs.
Tractor trailers weigh from anywhere from 15,000lbs-20,000lbs, with tractor about 15,000lbs-20,000lbs. So about 30,000lbs-40,000lbs unloaded. They can carry about 40,000lbs 50,000lbs. They cannot be over weight on any axle, which cannot be under 12,000lbs on steers, rear axles 34,000lbs, and on trailer axles, also have to be 34,000lbs. It can be under but not over. The max weight loaded is 80,000lbs Gross Weight. If weight is over the max on the axles or gross, the DOT can give a ticket up to $1 a pound. If the trailer has a ten foot spread axle, up to 40,000 lbs. is permitted on the trailer axles, although the federal gross weight still may not exceed 80,000 lbs.
Gross Vehicle Weight Rating, or GVWR is the rating given to a vehicle by the manufacturer. It can usually be found on the door pillar post (open the door and look for the sticker). Gross Combination Weight Rating is normally the weight assigned to a power unit (Truck Tractor) when speaking in terms of the weight of itself and the trailer. GCWR most generally would be 80,000 lbs., for a standard over the road truck configuration.
4700 series goes up to 26,000lbs.