Stopping on Hills/Inclines

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by AndrewMemphis, Feb 10, 2013.

  1. AndrewMemphis

    AndrewMemphis Light Load Member

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    Jan 5, 2013
    Southeast region
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    I agree, there are several fuel stops that are acceptable for Werner. But in the particular account that I am on (Net Ops, home every night/Day Cab), we are required to go to the Petro -- and this is one of the reasons why I end up taking this exit.
     
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  3. Pinner

    Pinner Medium Load Member

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    Feb 14, 2010
    B.C.
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    Wow, sounds pretty icy.
     
  4. pattyj

    pattyj Road Train Member

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    Sioux City,ia
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    Is that exit icy all the time like the next poster said?If so i'd be calling Werner and request a different fuel stop.Like you said,werner has alot of fuel stops and I don't think they would have a problem with you fueling elsewhere.Remember,SAFETY FIRST.
     
  5. AndrewMemphis

    AndrewMemphis Light Load Member

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    Jan 5, 2013
    Southeast region
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    No not all the time, the night I had to floor it above 2000 RPM's it was extremely foggy. This was within the past week, and that was also at a different exit -- exit 58 as you enter Clarksville, Arkansas on I-40 coming westbound.
     
  6. FozzyNOK

    FozzyNOK Road Train Member

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    Oklahomistan
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    Not even sure what the problem is. Unless the truck is ancient.. you don't have to apply any accelerator to get the truck moving (thats the hardest part for standard transmission car drivers to unlearn). You can be stopped on a huge grade fully loaded... you simply come out on the clutch and the ecm applies enough fuel to the the truck moving.. after that of course you have to start shifting if you want to gain speed.. and on grades, those shifts sometimes have to be done QUICKLY as your road speed drops faster than if you were on level ground...
     
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  7. AndrewMemphis

    AndrewMemphis Light Load Member

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    Jan 5, 2013
    Southeast region
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    That day cab is pretty beat up and old, the starter recently died on it.. We should be getting a new truck within the next week. I'll see how I do with that, and then I'll know if it was me or the truck that was the problem lol. It had over 250,000 miles on it..
     
  8. Lady K

    Lady K Road Train Member

    LOL... Ours has over 360K miles... But then we go OTR and not local... You can practice letting the clutch out with no fuel type of take off from level ground to get use to it... Then move to hills... Works well :)
     
  9. pattyj

    pattyj Road Train Member

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    Jul 19, 2008
    Sioux City,ia
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    hmmm not sure why you had to floor it if it was foggy that night.Can you post that exit on here?How about just easing up on that stop sign in 1st or second gear?Where I live it's all roller coaster hills.Even with bobtailing I stay in very low gear till I get to the bottom to make the turn onto my street.
     
  10. tinytim

    tinytim Road Train Member

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    Oct 29, 2007
    Northern Ontario
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    Not sure why you have to do that. Grab another gear once get moving or have a little more patience.
     
  11. Guntoter

    Guntoter Road Train Member

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    Phoenix, AZ
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    I have denied a job to more than a few people while doing a road test for that exact reason. Steering wheel holders are easier to find than an inexpensive transmission or driveshaft. A "professional driver" is harder to find but knows how to keep drivelines from breaking.
    If you touch that throttle before your foot is COMPLETELY off the clutch... Get out of my truck!
    If you use the clutch brake when your foot is not on the brake pedal... Get out of my truck!

    If you are on a hill and cant get rolling without using the throttle, you are in too high of a gear. If you cant get rolling in low without using the throttle, you will eventually turn your driveline into a pretzel. If I can start from a dead stop at 180K gross on a 6% grade without touching the throttle (till the clutch is completely engaged), any of you at 80K should have no problem. Horsepower, gear ratios, transmission type, etc, does not matter. ALL trucks will do it.
     
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