That depends on the size of the can. For a tandem axle, 30 yard containers are the norm. However, 30 yards of manure will probably put that truck well over the legal weight limit. A roll off tandem truck empty weighs in the vicinity of 31,000 - 35,000 lbs., leaving only about 10 tons (give or take) of weight before it's over the limit. Which is why a commodity such as manure would be delivered by a (lighter) dump truck, or by flatbed truck in bags, rather than by roll-off.
The average tandem axle truck can carry about 12 cubic yards of soil. Generally, a tandem axle truck has three axles.
17 tons
You need to be more specific about the configuration. Is a single axle straight truck, a tandem axle straight truck, a tandem axle straight truck with additional lift axles, a tractor trailer...?
A tandem truck usually refers to the amount of axles on the trailer or tractor. A single drive axle on a tractor would be referred to as a single, or the same for one axle on the trailer. I have seen it referred to the amount of tires on the end of an axle. When there are two tires on the end of the axle, that would be referred to as a dual, not a tandem.
The "tandem" part means it has two drive axles, although it is possible for a tandem truck to be a 6x2 vehicle, and have only one of those be a live axle.
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).
Need to know the specifics of the dump truck you had in mind. Tandem axle dumps in the company I work for... if they have a 'dirt tub' body, they can carry 16 cubic yards. The ones with the 'rock tub' dump bodies can carry 15 cubic yards.
The exact same thing as the first drive axle.
Roughly 6 yards - typically half the weight rating of a tandem axle truck - of course this will depend on the type of material you're hauling. Wet saturated materials and coarse rock will be less volumetrically than sand, organic soil etc.
In a single axle, most likely so. In a tandem axle, probably not.
40,680 lbs.
There's no such thing as a one axle truck. There has to be a minimum of two axles. "Single axle" if a term referring to a truck with only a single drive axle, and doesn't count the steer axle. Same with "tandem axle", "tri axle", "quad axle", and "quint axle".