The fuel tank capacity is 19 gallons bur realistically you will have about 16 gallons to use per tank and 400 miles is the range per tank of fuel. So, as you can see if you start with a full tank of fuel you will have to fill up one time and use almost 2 tanks of fuel.
That would depend on the size of the tank.
In detail--more than a lifetime.
Depends on size of truck and trailer, size of fuel tanks. But a good guest would be about 35,000 lbs.
I know of no world record for miles on a semi truck. I know of one that has over 3 million miles on the odometer but I would bet there are some with even more.
A wagoner in WW1 would be equal to a "truck driver" in WW2. Army trucks replaced wagons, and tanks replaced horses in the army.
It is not as simple as just taking the miles off. If you would like an older vehicle to have 0 miles on it you would have to have many parts on the vehicle resurfaced and replaced.
A wagoner in WW1 would be equal to a "truck driver" in WW2. Army trucks replaced wagons, and tanks replaced horses in the army.
6 MPG * 150 gal = 900 miles.
Depends on the car. A big fat heavy truck would get about 8 miles to a gallon. A small car 25-35 miles to a gallon.
That depends on what you are doing with the truck, luck and personal preference. All have good and bad points. You could get a lemon from any of the three, or you could get a truck that would go 500,000 miles with only normal maintenance.That depends on what you are doing with the truck, luck and personal preference. All have good and bad points. You could get a lemon from any of the three, or you could get a truck that would go 500,000 miles with only normal maintenance.
180/15 = 12 240 / 12 = 20 420 galls is needed.
That would depend on the average speed. If the average is 50 mph, they drove 650 miles.