20,000 - 25,000 lbs. tare would be a good estimate. The weight's going to vary by a number of factors, to include wheelbase, powerplant, what the bed is made out of (steel vs. aluminum), etc. And the model of truck will affect it, as well. E.g., a Mack RD series is going to be much lighter than a Western Star 4964 series truck.
A Mack tandem axle dump truck typically weighs between 15,000 to 20,000 pounds when empty, depending on the specific model and configuration. Factors such as the type of dump body, engine size, and additional features can influence the weight. Always refer to the manufacturer's specifications for the most accurate information.
Depends on a number of factors, such as make and model, type of dump body, powertrain, material the dump body is made of, PTO system, other attachments, etc. For a tandem axle, on-highway dump truck, you're looking at between 20,000 and 25,000 lbs.
40,680 lbs.
A dump truck with two drive axles.
empty weight
Somewhere in the vicinity of 19,000 - 23,000 lbs., depending on specifics such as drivetrain, wheelbase, material the dump body is made of and the height of the walls, etc.
A tandem axle (ten wheel) dump truck can typically weigh between 20,000 and 25,000 lbs., depending on make, model, steel or aluminum dump body, etc.
It's a trick question - gross weight is the loaded weight. The weight of an empty vehicle would be the tare weight. This would depend on exactly what model International it was, as well as the configuration (single axle, tandem, tri-axle, etc).
That depends on what it is. A tandem dump truck might weight between 20,000 - 24,000. A roll-off container with a 30 yard can mounted is going to be closer to 31,000 - 34,000. It's all dependent on the make of the truck, drivetrain, what type of body is mounted, etc.
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.
A dump truck with two (tandem) rear pulling axles supported by a third fixed axle located in the middle of the truck which only reaches the ground after a certain amount of load weight.
You mean a tandem axle straight truck... typically, the allotted Gross Vehicle Weight Rating for these ranges from 52,000 - 54,000, depending on wheelbase. The tare (empty) weight really depends on the configuration... a flatbed truck would likely weigh between 20,000 and 24,000 empty.. a dump truck, 22,000 - 25,000, a roll-off would be around 33,000 with a 30 yard can, etc.