What kind of rates are you getting now that things have picked up? Miles + fsc. Also, what are your pulling?
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What kind of rates are you getting now that things have picked up? Miles + fsc. Also, what are your pulling?
both together I get around 1.33. That fluctuates a bit with the price of fuel, but not much.
Dry van.
lately $ 2.50- $3.00 a mile. flatbed. locall 150 mi one way & 125 mi one way. approx $750.00 a day to truck.
Most of my hauls with my flatbed are long ones in excess of 2,000 miles and I've been getting around $1.50. After the long ones I get some short ones usually and get $2.00 to $2.50. I did get one long one for the Navy for $2.50 so my average seems to be around $1.75.
.41 CPM, loaded or empty.
oh yea, still co. driver :shock:
Don't drive like an ass!
yeah thats the thing.. i like the pay per mile when going on short runs. but the total pay aint much. when i run long like to g.r. mi. i get 1.25-1.50 a mile. of course i get paid by the weight that is what it comes to by the mile if ya do the calculations. the best loads i had was a 6 month long run of laod going to the docks in mobile al. 340 miles one way paying 1,000 to the truck.
$75/hr (without trailer) & $82/hr (w/ trailer), hauling dirt. 8 hrs a day average right now. No FSC.
(we really need a "local guys" forum)
$1.50 @mile for all miles the truck has traveled,over a 5 month average.
"I love college football. It's the only time of year you can walk down the street with a girl in one arm and a blanket in the other, and nobody thinks twice about it." --Duffy Daugherty
Rotate that picture 90 degrees. I'm getting a damn stiff neck!!!Originally Posted by floored
That's all that's getting stiff?
Hmmm whats dry van getting thats considered too low? Say G-man or any old hands, I was told not to take really low freight cuz they want the rate to come up and if its not hauled at a really low rate most O/0ps fiqure it will go up....but my overhead and cost is very low so could go low if I want....um what in dry van is too low cuz I heard many loads will be around $1-1.10per mile which suprised me their that low....Hmmm do they mean that low or even lower? For me the crucial factor is actually the weight; I could make $ hauling them if their light like 5,000-15,000 lbs such as papper cups or napkins cramped full in a van like they like, but I suspect it will be funny to see that a 44,000lb load pays the same c's per mile as a 10,000lb load which is ironic to me.
Pepe, figure out ALL of your costs on a yearly basis, divide that by how many miles you plan to do.
Now, what do YOU want to make after all expenses are paid for?
Add those two CPM's together, and don't work for any cheaper!
yeah i know the gig....just wondering tho how low is too low that pisses other drivers off if I haul cheap freight? I was wondering if I could get a concensus on dry van...Hmmm am I asking too much....drivers to agree on anything?
Well to be a little more detailed, I work for 1.32 CDN right now. Insurance and trailer are paid for by the company, as well as every other "little thing". All I do is take care of the truck, and pay the fuel. I don't consider that cheap.
You want cheap? Go talk to bison transport up here. They're cheap.
yeah I can probably work as low as Bison and still make $, however I dont want to be a, 'sucker' hauling loads way cheaper then I should or anyone else would.....hmmm company lease trucks always get 90c plus feul surcharge.....hmmm as I understand the broker will screw me out of my surcharge by including it in my final amount anyway........so was thinking 1.10 would be the absolute lowest i would take and only if its a light weight load.
I don't care if it weighed 300 lbs....I wouldn't haul ANYTHING for $1.10. :shock: I'm not a broke ass, nor am I desperate for work and to pay bills...so I would sit if I couldn't make money off of a load. You'd be better off flippng burgers at McDonalds for $6.00 an hour than running 100k miles a year at 1.10 a mile.
Save a drum......bang a trucker!
Hmmm rather be out running loads with the other latinos, you know the Mexican truckersOriginally Posted by Teal 95 KW
well they are going to undercut me so much I heard I gotta start there!
Hmmm quess thats the low paying freight you guys always tell me not to take...k Ill run it anyway ;-p
Me I Can make $ off a 300lb, 1.10 load easily, I have overhead right now cut to the bone....to compete with the other latinos coming over soon....although suppose I wont make them twist my arm if they want to pay me more :shock:
Ohhhh Boy! At 1.10 you'd be working for less than a lease-driver who's making .90+FSC which right now is probably about .24 or so. The lease driver isn't paying for a trailer, load costs, permits, or liability and cargo insurance. So, he's making significantly more than you at that rate. At that rate, he's making about the same $/mile as a company driver. However, out of that he has to pay self-employment tax, retirement, and health insurance. Therefore, the lease-driver is making significantly less than the company driver. So let's review the chain again...if you haul for $1.10, you're making significantly less than a large company lease-operator who is making significantly less than a company driver for the same outfit. So I ask you, what's the point?
Know your real costs. An O/O that spends $30,000 on a tractor doesn't have a truck expense 1/3 that of a guy that spent $90,000.
I try not to touch dry freight for less than $1.50 and that's only if there's a benefit to it. If it's just to keep the wheels turning, screw it. You don't make money just turning the wheels.
$1.10 is pretty cheap. Unless it's a backhaul to a huge $2.50+ load or something.
You have a lot more expenses then I do, and I would not work for $1.10
WHERE?????? funny everyone complains ill run cheap crap, but no one gives me hints where to get better ;-pOriginally Posted by no_worries
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