Approximately 15 to 20 cubic meters.
Not all 3 ton trucks will be the same size (have the ability to carry the exact same amount/volume of cargo), but one example would be:
Cargo body size (mm) = 5400×2298×400
Now, this would give you 4.96 cubic meters, but the 400mm measurement is just the height of the side of the cargo bay area ... in fact, cargo could be stacked probably 4 times that height, giving an effective cargo size/volume of 19.85 cubic meters.
Tipper truck load: 8.49 cubic meter If other trucks are used then it depends entirely on the dimensions of the truck.
Depends entirely on what the load is made of. -It can possibly hold 10 cm of cardboard, but less than 1/2 cm of liquid concrete
Depends on the size of the truck!
Do your home work
6 cubic mts
hhhhhiiiiiiiiii fellow idiot.
1 cubic foot = 0.0283168466 cubic meters
100 cubic feet = 2.83 cubic meters
10 cubic feet is about 0.283 cubic meters.
1 cubic millimeter equals 1e-9 cubic meters.
meters times meters will give you square meters, not cubic meters. You can't convert from square meters to cubic meters.
15.2911
A standard dump truck can haul approximately six cubic meters of sand. Sand and gravel are aggregates for foundations in Philippine construction.
How many cubic yards will my dump truck hold it is 16x5.5x8
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).
20
10
17 tons
one normal dump truck carries 10 cubic yard, hence it would take 390,000 dump trucks to move 3.9M cubic yard of earth
Dump truck specifications vary greatly- too much so for a "one size fits all" type of answer. A better idea of what type of dump truck, how many cubic yards the bed can hold, etc would be needed here.
Depends on the size of the dump truck bed, however if you have a 20 cubic yard bed on the dump truck and you fill it up, you'll have 50 loads. 1000 divided by 20 equals 50. If your dump bed was 30 cubic yards, like mine is, there would be 33.3333 loads. This also depends on the weight of the material, as the more dense the material the more it will weigh and the less you can legally haul.
Dump trucks typically don't haul liquid commodities, unless you're thinking of snow removal operations where they'll be outfitted with prewet or calcium chloride tanks. Even with that in mind, you need to remember that there are many different sizes of dump truck out there. 15 cubic yards is "typical" for a tandem axle dump truck.
I would like to see 20 cubic yards on a tandem. I would hate to pay that overload ticket.