16
As many as it was designed to hold. "Super Ten" is a transmission (and one which has largely fallen out of favor, at that), not a vehicle.
A typical tri-axle dump truck can hold approximately 12 to 16 cubic yards of wet soil, depending on its specific dimensions and weight restrictions. It's important to consider that wet soil is heavier than dry soil, which may affect the truck's load capacity. Always check the truck's specifications and local regulations for weight limits before loading.
Legally, it's usually around
Dump trucks come in many shapes and sizes, and the same holds true with dump bodies. For a tandem, 13 - 15 tons is typical.
None without fabrication.
Truck G can fit 20 boxes that measure 1 cubic yard each. Therefore, it has a total capacity of 20 cubic yards. Truck H is twice as large as Truck G, so its capacity is 2 times 20 cubic yards, or 40 cubic yards. To determine the number of boxes that can fit into Truck H, we need to know the volume of each box in cubic yards. If we assume that all boxes have the same volume as the ones that fit into Truck G (1 cubic yard each), then Truck H can fit 40 boxes. So, the measurement that can be used to determine the amount of boxes that can fit into Truck H is its total capacity in cubic yards.
Any up to1996
17 yards
5280 yards.
you should be able to get (volume wise) 3 cu yds in a 8 ft bed and roughly 2 in a short bed
432/36 = 12 yards
Exactly 1,760 .