From the question:Boat = Motor + 1500 so Boat - 1500 = MotorBoat = Trailer + 1900 so Boat - 1900 = TrailerBoat + Motor = 5 TrailersSteps:Boat + (Boat - 1500) = 5 (Boat - 1900)2 Boats - 1500 = 5 Boats - 95009500 - 1500 = 5 Boats - 2 Boats8000 = 3 Boats8000/3 = Boat2666 2/3 lbs = 1 Boat
there are 2
It is 430 pounds
25 Pounds.
It is 4 pounds.
12000 pounds
The total weight of the trailer and cargo can safely and legally carry what the axle is rated for, up to 3000 lbs with proper tires.
It depends on the commercial vehicle, how it's licensed, the state it's running in, and a lot of other things, but a tractor-trailer combination with tandem axles on the tractor and the trailer can generally carry 80,000 pounds--12,000 on the front axle and 34,000 on the tractor and trailer tandems.
around 44,000 pounds, legally, in the US.
700 bushels, or 42,000 pounds.
A ten foot spread axle trailer is allowed 20,000 lbs. per axle, for a total of 40,000 lbs.
The definitive answer is...it depends. Very few trailers are made with axels of 2000lb (or less) capacity. Most are 2500 to 5000 llbs (per axle). So if you have a dual axle trailer with two 3500 lb axles you can haul 7000 lbs MINUS what the trailer weighs. I have a single axle 6X12 with a single 3500 lb axle. The trailer weighs approx 500 lbs, so I would feel relatively safe hauling a 3000 lb load.
The weight limit of a single axle trailer depends on several factors. The frame, axle type, tire rating, and the springs all have to be factored in.Smaller trailers could be rated at only a few hundred pounds, while heavier built units can haul full sized cars.
Depends on the truck and configuration (e.g, tandem axle dump, tractor-trailer end dump, etc.).
3500
Gross 52,000 lbs
A trailer with 10' California spread can have 40,000 on the trailer axles without requiring a permit.