Swift-Driver Inspections 2% OOS rate
Wener-Driver Inspections 1% OOS rate
CRST-Driver Inspections 2% OOS rate
CR England-Driver Inspections 1% OOS rate
This is what I was looking at, which is what I felt was more indicative of fewer HOS VIOLATIONS. Your right, the other numbers are not good, but all categories aren't necessarily influenced by HOS violations, even Fatigued Driving. You can be determined to be fatigued and not have an HOS violation, such as crossing a center line ticket or being involved in a crash. As far as crashes go, these numbers are misleading. These are totals, and don't really reflect the accident per miles percentage you would need to be able to compare to the smaller carriers.
Why CSA 2010 and E-Logs are a good thing.
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Theophilus, Nov 6, 2011.
Page 192 of 243
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If all E-logs will do is lower the number of driver inspection oos % but raise every other category then I don't see that they are helping the industry any. Yay we have 1% oos rate for logs but 93% unsafe driving. Whats going to kill your family first a log violation or a driver running unsafe? I would much rather my family be driving around a driver thats been running for 12 hours versus a driver running 64.9mph in a 30mph zone and hits my family running 64.9mph while they are 30mph and destroying my family... I understand 93% unsafe is for speeding, crossing the center line, and other things but if this driver was able to control his running with paper than the roads would be safer. 93% is bull crap.
Flip Flops and otherhalftw Thank this. -
duplicate post. Sorry about that don't know whats going on with my computer lately.
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Speeding is the easiest of these items to talk to drivers about, there is seldom a reason to let the truck roll to 92 mph coming down a mountain. When the response is "well you didn't want the load to be late" followed by laughter, it's not a good sign. Eventually they'll get caught, or worse they'll be involved in an accident. That becomes a useful tool.
Likewise with hard braking events. It's one thing when you're travelling thru Dallas and some dude cuts across 4 lanes of traffic to take an exit, your choice are dynamite the brakes or homicide the driver. By all means, dynamite! It's something else when you slow down 30 mph in 2 seconds because you weren't paying attention to a light. That's a behavior we can address.
Roll Stability, well physics is fun. Dudes seldom believe they're doing anything wrong, but after speaking with them the frequency drops (well only if you always speak to them, and not just when you have free time).
So eLogs good for fatigued, EOBR good for unsafe (if you don't mind a babysitter), Meltom (awesome, except not available for another 2 years while watching his kids).
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volvodriver01, Cowmobile, Rocks and 1 other person Thank this.
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The point I was trying to make is that the reason large companies are going to E-Logs is that it reduces the number of HOS violations and consequently, fines. Money here is the incentive, not so much as safety.
volvodriver01 and sdlm Thank this. -
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