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.
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.
The 1500 or 2500 trucks have a capacity of 26 or 34 gal. The 3500 will have a capacity of 50gal.
The 2005 Aveo has a fuel capacity of 11.9 gallons. The mpg is 27 city, and 35 highway miles.
3-6 mpg
City or highway...
Depends on how it's ordered. Could be anywhere from 100 to 300 gallons.
Depending on a number of factors, you can expect four to eight miles per gallon. For a typical long distance line haul tractor, 240 gallons of fuel is the normal capacity, so, depending on load, speed traveled, vehicles specs, terrain, etc. one can expect 960 to 1920 miles on a full fuel load, roughly.
fuel tank capacity depends only on what make and size the truck is. the trucks only have fire and emergency equipment added to a truck that is bought from the manufacturer
twelve gallons for a car, and fifeen-eighteen gallons on suvs, and trucks
Four to eight miles per gallon, all factors dependent.
A 1999 Chevy Silverado 1500 has a 34 gallon fuel capacity. Depending on the engine, the truck will have a fuel rating of 15-17mpg city and 18-23mpg highway.
The fuel tank capacity on the 2002 Toyota Corolla is 13.2 gallons. This car got 28 miles per gallon in the city and about 37 miles per gallon on the highway.