0 used to describe vehicles that are designed to carry fairly light loads (= amounts of weight):
a light-duty truck/van/pickup Light-duty trucks cost less and use less gasoline than heavy-duty ones.
1 used for describing work that involves less physical activity than the usual type:
It is noted that the light-duty elastic rubber roller bearings with zero or slightly lapped over clearance may also be used to eliminate the joint gap.
Flex fuel automobiles represented almost 100 percent of the car sales in 2008, and 92 percent of all light-duty trucks sold.
In addition, manufacturers have started marketing vans and light-duty trucks with turbodiesels again.
As of 2009, light-duty trucks must meet the same emissions standards as passenger cars.
These units are highly portable and suitable for light-duty cooking.
The rotating vane design is mostly limited to small engines and/or to light-duty applications (passenger cars, race cars and light commercial vehicles).
Navigator four-wheel drives have been demoted to a light-duty one-speed single range transfer case which lacks low range gearing.
Best suited for light-duty, low-volume applications where cost is a factor.