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Originally Posted by gmh
Originally Posted by Karnajj
Didn't fail to mention squat. APU's have no bearing whatsoever to this discussion.
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Karnajj....he did answer it.....drivers are going to lose about 30 minutes of productivity a day if they are willing to work a full 10 hours. I would say that as long as I had a job tomorrow morning I would be happy. Even if you only drive 450 miles a day for 6 days that is still 2700 miles for the week no matter how you slice it. The thing is, getting a driver to want to be productive during his available hours.
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Originally Posted by Karnajj
On top of that I get a message from my terminal manager saying that I idled too much last week?
I spent two days in Houston with the temps in the 90's because there was no freight due to the holiday. What do they expect me to do? Go sit in the truck stop and stare at people for entertainment? Get a motel and not get compensated? Hook up to idle air and pay for it out of my own pocket? I don't think so. The days of irregular-route coolie OTR trucking are quickly coming to a close. The end of artificially low fuel prices are forcing these coolie operations to take a REAL look at efficient logistics operations, or quickly fail. Wave goodbye to the days of yuckin it up around the truckstop all weekend with a 500hp motor idling just to power your AC, CB. Or chasing empties for hundreds of miles. Not feasible any more. It's over. The battlefield is already piling up with victims. The writing is certainly on the wall. Get out now. |
The days of irregular-route OTR trucking are quickly coming to a close. You're right, though, in that carriers have to look at becoming more efficient. And that's why you're seeing so many companies reduce truck speed. |
Ask a long term Jevic driver if they could have been given the option several months ago to drive a 62 mph truck?
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I just want to quote Paul Harvey......."And now the Rest of the Story....."
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Originally Posted by bluebeetle
Karnajj....he did answer it.....drivers are going to lose about 30 minutes of productivity a day if they are willing to work a full 10 hours. I would say that as long as I had a job tomorrow morning I would be happy. Even if you only drive 450 miles a day for 6 days that is still 2700 miles for the week no matter how you slice it. The thing is, getting a driver to want to be productive during his available hours.
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Originally Posted by Twilight Flyer
The days of irregular-route OTR trucking are quickly coming to a close. You're right, though, in that carriers have to look at becoming more efficient. And that's why you're seeing so many companies reduce truck speed. |
The problem with your line of thinking is that short-medium haul freight is not profitable to the DRIVER unless the company they drive for is willing to pass along some of the extra profit along to the drivers. Most compnanies are to greedy to do that. |
Originally Posted by Twilight Flyer
The problem with your line of thinking is that short-medium haul freight is not profitable to the DRIVER unless the company they drive for is willing to pass along some of the extra profit along to the drivers. Most compnanies are to greedy to do that. http://www.swifttruckingjobs.com/doc...ng%20Scale.pdf So yes, some companies actually pass on the profit of shorter hauls to the driver. However some don't. |
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