4 years ago at a paper mill in florida got in line 4 hours later i bumped a dock
an hour after that got told they loaded my rolls on another truck so pull on the hill and take a nap
26 hours later they had my rolls ready and loaded me at that time i got 25 dollars a stop and 20 an hour for detention considering 1500 miles each way at 39cpm and 100 in detention unloading it made me a lover of jb hunt that week
Longest Live Load/Unload? Can u top this?
Discussion in 'Shippers & Receivers - Good or Bad' started by shaken, Dec 22, 2006.
Page 21 of 36
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Longest wait I have had for unload OR load was actually not the shippers or recivers fault. Was hauling a load from Laredo to just east of Tampa, 42k of frozen broccoli (i call it haz mat). Halfway through the trip, I hit a fairly large bird in Louisiana, and it literally shattered the drivers side of my windshield. I barely was able to see enough to make it to the TA on the highway and wait. It took 24 hours for the repair guys to come out and change the windshield out. This put me too late for my appointment of 5am on a Tuesday, I didn't get there till about 5pm, and they were already closed. So sat there till next morning outside their gate. Found out the reschedule was for 10am on Thursday. The receiver was very nice. told me where I could park in their yard and even offered to bring me lunch from the taco place around the corner.
I was told my my company i should receive 3 days detention pay for it, but have yet to receive any of it. $75 per day X 3 days means they aren't paying me $225... -
Dont know dot drive
-
-
i am not a driver,but I am finding this thread interesting,but thought if you were waiting,you still got paid.
-
In the next several years, I am contemplating becoming a professional truck driver. I am currently in the process of of getting more physically fit, cleaning up my MVR, cleaning up my credit history/report, trying to get a full 10 year work history without any layoffs or terminations, along with staying clean on everything else to fulfill DOT requirements.
After reading all these incredible detention reports, I can see it will be to my advantage that I have not married and do not have any children to support. This type of unpredictability can wreak havoc on family life. Unfortunately, both of my parents are also deceased. If and when I decide to go into professional trucking, my days of having to worry about them will be long gone. One cannot take care of an aging parent if they are on the road, especially with this type of unpredictability.
Over the road truck driving is NOT geared for married individuals trying their best to raise a family or maintain a marriage. It is also not geared for people trying to care for an aging parent, grandparent, or any elderly relative needing round the clock care. Years ago, when I was in the service, these same situations also applied. Some occupations & professions are really stacked against married individuals with families or individuals needing to care for an aging parent. -
Hey mje-How are you?I think super long load/unloads are a very low percentage.When i'm out on the road,i figure sometimes that happens.It can be a good thing.You can get much needed rest,let your log book catch up.Gives you a chance to get paperwork done too.If you are definitely homeward bound it's different.If you are out x amount of weeks and it's in the middle of that,other than not going anywhere,it isn't a lot different from a normal to me day in this business.Everything being equal,don't let that be the deciding factor to not look into this as a job.
Also the ten year history,based on my experience,doesn't have to be spotless.Lay offs happen.I was fired for a bad attitude.I tell them that,why it happened and it hasn't slowed me down getting hired or offered.I've done this for many years,OTR and local.I've been able to do and see things i couldn't have afforded otherwise.Trucking will be exactly what you make it to be.It's not always easy.It's been a good life though.I hope whatever you do,it's the best for you and what you want.Take care.Brian
Back to the topic-My longest unload was in Phoenix coming off days off in Tucson.The unnamed company i worked for had me pickup a dropped trailer.It was loaded front to back on the floor.I forgot how many pieces.They wouldn't pay the lumper fee.It took three working days,four total-sunday closed-to get it done.I still think the driver knew what he was getting into,screamed out to Phoenix and dumped the trailer.Pre electronic logs.Take care.Brian -
My longest was unloading at Ralph's in Compton for 22 or 23 hours... in a day cab. I was local at the time so it was all paid by the hour but I can't sleep in a day cab. I think I played video games for a good 18 hours of it.
-
This is why OTR trucking has a high turnover rate, which trucking companies prefer to call "driver shortage" or "churning." Dictionary-com defines "churning" (as a verb) as "a stockbroker who trades excessively in order to earn more in commissions." With trucking, driver recruiters are hired to promise you heaven if you sign on; they're paid according to how many drivers submit an application, plus an additional pay when the driver passes DOT background check and is hired. The vast majority of married OTR newbie drivers will spend one year of OTR to establish their verifiable driving experience, then submit applications or resumes with local driving positions. This way, they come home every night and weekends to spend quality time with family.
Whoa, look at the time; I have to get to my next class. I'm at the college library as I'm uploading this reply. -
Our longest load time was 21 hours at Cargill in Beardstown, Il. Got there at 7:00 am for a 8:00am appointment and had a 8 hour drop dead time of 4:00pm left later at 5:00am. Our company does not charge them detention so they loaded all the trucks that did while we sat and watched.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 21 of 36