Cold mornings are made for danishes with the cereal. Hot chocolate is my coffee substitute.
Would it be better if one simply drove, say, nine hours per instead of eleven in order to attempt to beat the masses to a parking spot at a truck stop? If my truck is governed to 62mph, I may just take US highways and stay off the interstates anyway. The truck I drove OTR was governed 69 mph and I had trucks running up me backside from Nebraska, through Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
What percentage of your days driving at Knight did you need more than ten hours driving per twenty-four hours? Finally, if I have to drive team again, it better be someone older than thirty years of age and in a truck with better suspension than the one I rode in this past winter.
Knight has a History of 'unrealistic' Driver Policies
Discussion in 'Knight' started by OverDrive, Jun 18, 2012.
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Working for Knight, you wont have a lot of 10 hr driving days unless getting runs 1000 miles or more. With mostly short-medium hauls, much of your time will be spent loading/unloading/fueling/looking for MT's, etc.
And to make many delivery times, having the 'luxury' of only driving 9 hrs vs. a full 11 hrs may not be feasible. And sometimes 'over driving' up to 1 hr may be a risk to take, which I heard is harder to get away with now with Elogs. But I always tried to drive 'safe' knowing my limits over the years...but starting out, did usually feel sleep deprived often until got used to it---found chewing crunchy foods like pretzels kept me awake!
I team drove with a guy my age starting out (late 40's) who was a great guy but we did get on each other's nerves after 24/7 in a space the size of a typical house bathroom. Plus we both were leaders and had leadership conflicts every so often.
The prob w/driving US Hwys is that you drive thru many towns all with at least 1 stop light! But if you have the time, they are usually scenic... -
Thank your for answering my questions. The responses were pretty much what I figured. DNA Mach says a typical week at Knight can be a 1,400 mile dispatch on Monday morning delivering Thursday. If one is lucky enough to T-call it, then one gets a 400 mile load on Thursday delivering Monday. I simply see no reason to sprint to the finish line with just 1,800 miles per week and 66 available hours to drive them, a 27.27 mph pace.
A major reason I am deciding on Squire/Knight is because, allegedly, they do not force team driving on newbies during the training period like Gordon or WEL or CRST and in the latter team driving is force for one's duration at CRST unless one goes O/O.
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Didnt have Squire when I was there, but from what I have heard (NOT teaming driving, but student training) doesnt sound too bad...
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