Brilliant!
Wonderful!
Eureka!
Now that you mentioned it ... instead of saying go away, you can do something good and come to the rescue.
From what I see, aquiring a step deck today is relatively easy. I think 40 grand can get you something decent(?).
Actually, adding a step deck to a van could be quite a practical combination.
Could you offer some advice here to all the struggling dry van o/os, for rates are dropping down towards 2.0 per mile these days and as you were proving in the other thread you can't survive on that at all, on what else to aquire other than a naked stepdeck trailer....or maybe a regular flatbed trailer would do just fine too?
Chains, straps, bulkhead, tarps...? How about cargo securment? Are there any classes at any local college for continuing education where I could sign up and get some drill on that? Lol. Most likely not but how about organizing a cargo securment camp and showing the others of what to do and what not to?
Could it be life endangering to climb up the cargo to tarp and what one has to do not to fall?
Does it really require a person to be very physically fit? Is it really such a demanding labor to secure and tarp cargo?
Can you confirm that switching back and forth between a van and an open deck device is a good method to optimize the revenue?
Maybe, if more poeple are encouraged to do open deck freight, the dry van world would get some relief?
Rates are crashing and fuel to the moon!
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Kenworth6969, Mar 3, 2022.
Page 164 of 1045
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I had prior flatbed experience prior to coming back though for what that's worth.Rideandrepair Thanks this. -
Rideandrepair, Dave_in_AZ, Dadetrucking305 and 2 others Thank this.
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Vampire, Rideandrepair, Dale thompson and 15 others Thank this.
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It's not something you want to jump into blind and have days where "how do I secure this load"?
Tarping sucks, especially in winter.
Yeah I think you need to be in shape, I've had to climb up and down on top of loads many times and sometimes in 100 degrees.Rideandrepair, RubyEagle and D.Tibbitt Thank this. -
There was pain deep within a soul when I'd be tarping heavy complex loads and then jump on the board and see Van Loads were paying the moon.
Flatbed is a lot of work and risk, it better pay a lot more than Van. When it doesn't then I feel dumb doing it.Rideandrepair Thanks this. -
Some people are jumping into flatbed with no experience which is
Can tell that with some of the threads popping up here and seeing more bad securment going Down the road.Rideandrepair, Dave_in_AZ and JonJon78 Thank this. -
Rideandrepair, Dadetrucking305, D.Tibbitt and 4 others Thank this.
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Nobody wants to haul for 2 dols per mile, so they may jump to the open deck segment. A certain degree of physical fitness, and at times getting yourself wet and dirty may present a natural discomfort barrier to some reefer or van operators, but if the money is abysmally better, then not as much and not as many.
Therefore, I propose the creation of a number of threads that would provide certain basic guidelines for prospective flatbed owner-operators, so that they can jump on the wagon of the elitarian segment. Maybe this way, we'll contribute to the don't haul for 2 dols per mile problem.Siinman Thanks this. -
Flatbed Trucking ForumBig Road Skateboard Thanks this.
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