Essential things need always to be fixed to ensure the livelihood. The livelihood precedes other things in my book. If I can do it myself, without paying someone else, I would do it. There is always time to take time off and enjoy life. I guess, it is a matter of personal preference.
Yes, if I did the OTR work weeks on end and only spent two- three days at home then spending time working on a truck would be the last thing I would want to do.
It is a moot point for me, anyways. Other than superficial stuff I don't have the right place to do my own repairs.
Truck Load Rates Halt 8 Week Slide 2.0
Discussion in 'Freight Broker Forum' started by Scooter Jones, Mar 7, 2020.
Page 610 of 682
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
-
Ok, basically down time is when I need it and it is not available. Simple, thanks.
-
I don't know anyone with an older truck that spends half their off time working on it. If I have a week invested in a year's time into routine PM's I'd be surprised. Let's say I had a week in that and another 3 weeks above it in other downtime working on the truck, what's the big deal? It's not anywhere near what people make it out to be having an old truck and supposedly spending all one's off time on maintenance. I work on it at my leisure and am already taking off for several months in a year anyways. I'm not trying to argue which is better as clearly each has their good points. If I had a $4,000 truck note every month I'd have to say bye bye to my lazy ways and bust ### every month.
TallJoe, 86scotty, dwells40 and 1 other person Thank this. -
dwells40 Thanks this.
-
If you look at the original post that I first replied to about the value of one’s time he equated wrenching on your own older truck that gets 6mpg to be the same as running a newer one getting 7mpg and taking it to a shop. That’s about $10k, give or take, and that’s a lot of wrenching on your own stuff.
I realize it’s not every weekend, same as every new truck doesn’t come with a $4k payment.Siinman, bumper Jack and dwells40 Thank this. -
I don't know, I just do what I do and saying it as an option. Whatever the old truck eats as far as "extra" fuel, parts and labor - outweighs any payment and "extra" fuel "savings" on a new one in my book.. and it gives me ability to be home as much as I'm pleased.
-
I make more money with a new truck and a new truck payment than I did with an old truck with no payment. Results may differ, but for me it’s a clear decision.
86scotty, Accidental Trucker, Midwest Trucker and 4 others Thank this. -
It's hard for me to compare paying myself to do work against a shop's rate. I can have a job done in 8 hours, where even if the shop can do it in 4 hours, it takes a day to get checked in, a day to make it into a bay, a day to do the work, and a day to get the call that my truck is ready. It's one of the bad things about owning a Volvo motor, and most shops use their Up-Time system. First come, first serve doesn't work very well if they take people who checked in after you and move them to the front of the line. Any non-dealer work I get done seems to be fair, since the truck doesn't get caught up in all the red tape.
I can actually screw up a job, and still come out ahead financially and time wise redoing the work. -
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 610 of 682