So many Traveller illustrations have the scale messed up. 4 dT is huge. Hmmm, apparently I don't have access to my old photobucket account. Well, I'll have to use words.
When you look at the detail of the 4-man enclosed raft, notice that the seats are a full meter wide, and the seat depth is about 60 cm. That's approximately 50% larger than the seats in my cars. You'd look like a little kid pretending to drive Mom's car when sitting in those seats.
The overall width is a full 3 m. You could fit two tour bus seats beside the driver and two rows of two and two behind. It's actually a good 30 cm or so wider than a tour bus, so with side access you could get rid of the center aisle and have two rows of five, and maybe even squeeze a third seat to the right of the driver.
It's a full meter shorter than the 3.5 m height assumed for the two 1.5 m squares per dT. If actually made that tall it would be about the height of the typical double-deck commuter bus seen around silicon valley. You'd lose too much space for access to the upper deck in a vehicle of that length, but just sayin' ya could. At the least you could have a cargo deck underneath the seating, as in many commercial buses.
I've considered this. IMTU, the Air/Raft is often part of a "Grav Train" system of linked vehicles, with computer controlls in the "slave" cars. One favorite is a flatbed or low wall conformable sled, no seats and minimal controls, perfect for hauling a 4 ton container. There are larger sleds for larger containers, giving a sort of "semitrailer truck" effect--but the big advantage of the 4ton sled is that it fits neatly above (or below) the air/raft in its hanger. If you have the cash, you get a much enhanced cargo-hauling capacity in the standard storage space.