As many as it holds. There isn't a set specification for this, and the bed/cargo compartment capacity will often vary in accordance with the commodity being hauled. E.g., a truck bought solely to carry mulch will carry more cubic yards/cubic meters than a truck bought to carry stone aggregates and/or asphalt, since the mulch is a much less dense material. It'll vary in accordance with that and also with the weight/length laws of the country you're in (which we have no way of telling).
96 inches for the cab, and the dump body can be up to 102 inches wide.
20.000 - ~25,000, depending on specifics.
That depends on the dimension of the dump body. The dump body could hold 15 - 20 cubic yards of material, typically. As for what can legally be hauled, it depends on the commodity and weight of the commodity per cubic yard, as well as state laws pertaining to what weight limits they allow for a tri-axle.
Depends. 17 tons, give or take, is typical.
They're usually between 11 - 12 feet tall at their tallest point.
The amount of dirt a dump truck can hold depends on the size of the dump truck. The average tri axle dump truck can hold 12 cubic yards of dirt, and a quad axle can hold 14.
Your dump truck will hold approximately 176 cubic yards. This can be calculated by multiplying the dimensions together (16 x 5.5 x 8 = 704) and then converting the result from cubic inches to cubic yards (704 / 46,656 = 0.0151).
4289321 cubic inches
20
A standard dump truck can haul approximately six cubic meters of sand. Sand and gravel are aggregates for foundations in Philippine construction.
The average dump truck can hold between 10 to 20 cubic yards of rubble. This volume can vary depending on the size and type of the dump truck. Remember to check the specific capacity of the dump truck you plan to use.
It depends on the size of the dump trucks, but assuming a standard dump truck can hold about 10-15 cubic yards of dirt, it would take approximately 260,000 to 390,000 dump trucks to move 3.9 million cubic yards of dirt.