Training with a trainer?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Brownsfan16, Oct 8, 2012.

  1. Brownsfan16

    Brownsfan16 Medium Load Member

    340
    40
    Sep 7, 2011
    0
    How do most companies handle this? I know they will usually set a amount of hours a driver has to reach before they are "signed off" to drive solo or tested by the company to drive solo. I am more curious about will this training basically be running as a team and you take turns sleeping but constantly moving?

    Or will he just be sitting there while the trainee drives?

    Does it vary greatly from company to company how this training is handled?
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Brandt

    Brandt Road Train Member

    4,498
    6,149
    Sep 17, 2012
    0
    Lots of big companies run the truck as a team. The one I drove for did. The students would sleep while the trainer drove. It sound bad but i don't think new drivers want to spend 8 weeks driving with trainer so the student driving time. So they ran them as team and 4 weeks as team. Another thing is the money loads only pay extra money if they are team runs. So it kinda hard to run two people on solo runs. The loads don't pay that much money per miles
     
  4. jbee

    jbee Medium Load Member

    664
    619
    Jun 3, 2011
    NC
    0
    Varies from company to company. Back when I went out with my trainer, we kept the same hours at first. The only day I didn't drive was when I was sick as a dog. I had to get past the basics before we went to a team op. If he didn't feel comfortable, we would continue to run the same hours. Did that for the 1st week and the next 3, we ran it as a team operation.
     
  5. Cobra67y20

    Cobra67y20 Medium Load Member

    317
    139
    Jul 24, 2012
    Oviedo, Fl
    0
    Yea, back when I drove with my trainer (90's) we drove 5 on 5 off rotated until we got to our destination. We ran hard and it was fun!
     
  6. Brownsfan16

    Brownsfan16 Medium Load Member

    340
    40
    Sep 7, 2011
    0
    How is sleeping in a moving truck?
     
  7. dptrucker

    dptrucker Road Train Member

    4,681
    3,197
    May 14, 2012
    adelanto,ca.
    0
    quite an experience. i had a hard time sleeping with all the bouncing the truck does.lot of these freeways are really rough. my trainer always let me stop and take a few hours rest and he would do the same thing if we got too tired. was nice when i went solo lol
     
  8. Brownsfan16

    Brownsfan16 Medium Load Member

    340
    40
    Sep 7, 2011
    0
    My concern would be ending up getting extremely tired while driving if I couldn't sleep while the truck was moving.
     
  9. Okieron

    Okieron Crusty Okie

    1,641
    1,024
    Dec 23, 2009
    muskogee, ok
    0
    when your trainer runs you as a team then near the last week he should let you run it as you were by yourself ! That way if you had questions you could get them now and not when your by yourself. I could never sleep while ruck was moving, but I just kind of catnapped for 10 hours. I would never be a good team driver
     
  10. Brownsfan16

    Brownsfan16 Medium Load Member

    340
    40
    Sep 7, 2011
    0
    Yea I am positive team driving would not be for me. Do some companies have for the duration of training a normal schedule where both sleep at the same time or is that asking for to much?
     
  11. KMac

    KMac Road Train Member

    3,427
    3,067
    Jan 26, 2012
    Waxahachie, TX
    0
    It going to depend on the company... the one I work for its 5 weeks with a trainer, the first three weeks the truck is limited to 850 miles per day, the last two it can run 1000 but the truck has to be shut down for an 8hr break too... consequesntly they are pretty much dispatched as solo and the trainer is awake and in the jump seat the whole time the trainee is driving.
     
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.