48 foot trailer: 3000 cu. ft. or 30,000 lbs 53 foot trailer: 3400 cu. ft. or 34,000 lbs.
4054.5
5' x 10' x 2' = 100 cubic feetdivided by 27 (27 cubic feet in a cubic yard) = 3.7 "Yards" (cubic yards)Filled completely and level with the top, the trailer will hold 3.7 yards.Now,, assuming that soil weighs approx 2500 lbs per cubic yard, this comes to 9250 Total lbs, which is FAR more than a typical 5' x 10' single axle trailer can handle as far as weight. (A trailer this size usually maxes out at about 2000 lb load)
53 x 7 can only give you area (sq ft) you need a third dimension to give a cubic figure. Then you just multiply the three firgures. so if it was 2ft by 53 by 7 feet it would be 2*53*7= 742 cubic feet
Depends on the height. Multiply, lenght x width x height of trailer to get the volume of trailer in cubic ft. Then divide by one cubic yard converted in cubic ft. (3x3x3=27). It should give you an approximate amount. (LxWxH=V/27)= cubic yards
4013 cubic feet for a standard 53' dry van. See related link for source
To find the height of the trailer, divide the total volume (1375 cubic feet) by the length (53 feet). Therefore, the height of a 53-foot trailer with a volume of 1375 cubic feet would be approximately 25.94 feet.
Multiply length X width X height of trailer to find total cubic measure.
The total volume of the trailer would be 53 x 8.5 x 9 = 4048.5 cubic feet. To convert this to cubic yards, divide by 27 (since 1 cubic yard is equal to 27 cubic feet). Therefore, the trailer has approximately 149.94 cubic yards of capacity.
The interior dimensions of a 53' semi trailer is 52 feet in length and 99 inches in width. The capacity is 4050 cubic feet.
A standard 53' dry van trailer has a capacity of about 3,800 cubic feet.
48 foot trailer: 3000 cu. ft. or 30,000 lbs 53 foot trailer: 3400 cu. ft. or 34,000 lbs.
A 53-foot trailer holds 3816 cubic feet of air (8' wide by 9' high by 53' long). The floor space on an 8' x 53' trailer would be 424 sq. ft.
4054.5
26 standard size pallets
It depends on the size of the tractor trailer. Find the dimensions of the trailer and divide it by 16 cubic units.
The number of bales that can fit onto a semi will depend on the width and length of the semi's trailer and the overall cubic feet of each bale. A standard semi trailer in North America can be 8 feet to 8 feet 6 inches wide by 13 feet 6 inches high and anywhere from 28 to 53 feet long. Small square hay bales are usually 5.25 to 6 cubic feet. So if multiple the height by width, by length, you'll get the cubic feet of the trailer, you then divide that number by the cubic feet of the hay bales to figure out how many will fit in each size of trailer.