That depends on the height of the bed walls - they make various heights for various applications. For example, dedicated debris and coal trucks tend to have considerably higher bed walls than asphalt/stock material trucks.
They're usually between 11 - 12 feet tall at their tallest point.
96 inches for the cab, and the dump body can be up to 102 inches wide.
20.000 - ~25,000, depending on specifics.
Depends. 17 tons, give or take, is typical.
9 feet.
Concrete is measured in yards, not tons. As for permissible tonnage on a dump truck, it'll vary by state. IIRC, in North Carolina, a tri-axle dump is typically good for 16 - 18 tons, dependent on tare weight, wheelbase, and whether they're traveling on primary or secondary roads.
6.5mt
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.
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Whatever it is. That's only the capacity of the dump body... it says nothing about the wheelbase, height, etc.
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.
A dump truck with two drive axles.