I just recently finished up my CDL course in Chester, VA. I finished the course in 4 weeks, and I have a CDL-A with X endorsement (Hazmat and Tanker). I left a dead-end sales job to do this, and now I'm looking forward to getting started driving!
I've been looking at driving tankers, because 1) it's more specialized - I'll have a skill that not everyone has; 2) higher CPM; and 3) good possibilities for running local routes in the future, assuming I want to. Still, I wouldn't be opposed to driving vans.
I'm scheduled to attend orientation for Prime on Monday, January 30. However, I just got a call from Abilene today. Both offers sound pretty attractive, and if I can believe what the recruiters have told me about mileage, I'll probably make close to the same amount with either company once I finish training. Here's what I'm trying to weigh.
Reasons to go with Prime:
Will learn to drive tankers
Manual shift - I won't forget how to shift in the first year
APU in truck (can someone confirm?)
Higher CPM (.48 vs .36)
Reasons to go with Abilene:
Locally based (Richmond, VA)
Trucks will be easier to drive (automatic, dry van and reefer)
Potential for better hometime (every weekend with regional; 12/2 or 18/3 with OTR)
Option of NE regional (with 10cpm bonus)
Higher mileage and 48 state range = more experience?
I know about the driver facing cameras, Volvo vs Freightliner, etc. Don't care too much about that. I also wouldn't mind running NE so I can hone some city driving skills.
I need to ask about tuition repayment with Abilene, too. Prime offers $1500 towards driving school repayment.
Any advice from more experienced people? Should I stick with Prime and head out Sunday or jump on board with Abilene?
New Driver - Advice? Prime vs. Abilene
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Bob_Opossum, Jan 26, 2017.
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Update: I may have just answered my own question. Abilene's rider policy is family-only. That's a big holdup for me.
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Prime has tanker runs in the Northeast that should get you home on weekends.
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I'd go with tankers. Get some experience with tankers and a whole new world opens up for you for great paychecks.
Bob_Opossum, Thull and tech10171968 Thank this. -
Bob_Opossum Thanks this.
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Go OTR with Prime in a tanker. Stress that you want to go the tanker route to them. Reasons being:
Specialized- more $
Manual transmission
Better potential for a well paying local gig
I've done some longer hauls in a tanker and most places are setup for trucks loading and unloading. The only time I've had issues getting into a drop was when I hauled gas. Stations can be very tight but get some experience with Prime and you'll be ready for that. I don't mind autos but they suck in a smooth bore. You can't work with the surge like in a manual. Plus, being a new driver, you've gotta learn how to shift and work with the truck. You don't want to be 10 years in and never drive a manual bc you may be interested in an LTL gig someday and you'll be lost in those dinosaur rigs.Bob_Opossum Thanks this. -
I pulled tankers with an automatic transmission and liked it better than a stick shift. Pulled smooth bore, baffled and dry bulk, running 48 states.
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Hey! Thanks for all the pointers. I'm pretty confident in my decision now. I'll be on a bus Sunday morning to Pittston, PA to train with Prime.
UsualSuspect and Chinatown Thank this. -
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