Every tractor is different. A 50 hp tractor might have 15-20 gal fule tank. 150 Hp might have 75 gallons and 500 might have 300 gallons. Then you have garden tractors, that aren't real tactors, that MIGHT have a 3 gallon tank.
Depends on the size of the tractor and what work it is doing.
No, to show you I would have to be there with you and I am not.
fuel capcity for highway tractor trucks varies from vehicle to vehicle can be as little as 75 gallons, all the way up to 400 gallons.
Depends on how it's ordered. Could be anywhere from 100 to 300 gallons.
Standard fuel tank capacity on a 1998 F-150 is reported to be 25 gallons.
Standard fuel tank capacity on a 1998 F-150 is reported to be 25 gallons.
Fuel capacity depends on the length of the van. The standard length van fuel capacity is about 20 gallons and if you have an "extended" version the fuel capacity is 25 gallons.
It shows up when you buy a vehicle such as a tractor or a harvester. It is your fuel bar, shows you how much fuel you have to run your vehicles with.
Varies depending on the specs requested by the buyer. Fuel is weight and hauling weight you are not getting paid for is not a good thing in trucking. A typical road tractor will have between a 200 to 300 gallon capacity with 300 being the largest allowed by DOT.
There's a lot of variables to that question. For instance, how big of a tractor? Is it gas or diesel? And, what is it doing? Plowing would use considerably more fuel than cutting hay, for instance.
Fuel capacity is 27 gallons standard and 35.7 gallons with the optional tank.
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