This depends on the capacity of the dump truck and the depth of the spread.
It depends on the size of the dump truck.
That depends on what type of transmission the dump truck has. A dump truck could be anything from a one ton pickup to a Class 8 truck, all the way up to the articulated dump trucks used for sitework and the off-road dump trucks used in rock quarries and such.
if the rock fell off of the truck, truck pays. if the rock was slung up from the roadway, you pay.
Provided it's not a short tandem, 15 yards with a 'rock tub' dump body and 16 yards with a 'dirt tub' dump body are typical.
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.
That depends on the truck. I could load 1/4 ton of rock into a pickup truck, and consider it a truckload, or I could be referring to a truckload being 25 tons of rock in a 40 ft. frameless end dump trailer.
a tipper, is a dump truck used to haul rock, sand gravel, asphalt, trash and anything else that needs hauling and dumping. sort of like a huge wheelbarrow
Almost 6 yards, or about a medium dump truck load.
Which weight? Gross weight? Tare weight? What configuration? 1 ton pickup? Single axle Class 7/8 truck? Tandem axle truck? Tri-axle truck? Quad axle truck? Quint axle truck? Centipede? "Superdump" quint with Strong Arm? Transfer truck? Tractor-trailer end dump, or belly dump, or side dump? Try to narrow down the variables a bit. There's really no way of knowing what an "average" dump truck is without knowing statistics of how many single axle, tandem, tri-axle, quad, quint, centipede, and superdump dump trucks are out there - to the best of my knowledge, no such statistics have been compiled. At the company I work for, our tandem axle dumps (with steel dump bodies) weigh between 23,000 and 24,500... the 23,000 lbs. trucks are the Peterbilt 330s, and the 24,500 lb. trucks are the Kenworth T800s with "rock tub" steel bodies, high lift gates, and split gate beds. These are the tare (empty) weights, not the loaded weights.
Depends if you want fill dirt or topsoil, I have gotten fill for $40 a load but it had alot of rock. I bought large dump loads today for $100 a load and he will spread it out but it just depends what they have and how far they have to haul it.
35,000 - 40,000 lbs, all things dependent. There'll be a big difference between, say, a Western Star 4964EX pulling a 40 ft. steel rock tub and an aero truck pulling a 28 ft. aluminum framed dirt tub.