There is a right way to haul frieght and then there is what your doing. No offense intended but what your doing is not legal and you are setting yourself up for problems. What do you think would happen if you were involved in a serious or fatal accident and the lawyers found out you were hauling commercial frieght?
Finally got my own truck
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by BoyWander, Jan 1, 2017.
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Not to mention when you crash and destroy grandma's antique armoire that's worth 15,000. Then the owner will sue the #### out of you. And you have no cargo insurance. Lose lose situation. Sad part is you, and the shipper won't find any of this out until it's TOO LATE!!
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I've also never tried telling anyone else in this thread "how they ought to do it", I'm just asking why professional O/O's like yourself and others, avoid branching out into markets like Craigslist, UShip, and other private avenues? If an inexperienced guy like myself can haul a couch that fits inside a SUV and make $300-$400, why are the experienced professionals bypassing this market and instead pulling cheap trailer loads of freight that seems hardly worth it? -
There's a reason why UShip has a mostly bad reputation in the general trucking community. Because of people hauling things for pay without having legal authority and insurance to do so, and moving it for cheap. I can't just tow something behind a 53' van, I'd be overlength.
And I doubt anyone is gonna want to bother making a bill of lading to move a garden tractor. This is all bad advice.
As far as partials, I've been exploring those options. -
CaptainDaveG, Oxbow, fordconvert and 1 other person Thank this.
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Again, my insurance company was willing to cover me since it was incidental commercial activity and they put it in writing. I was willing to take the risk on private insurance and I'm not advocating that anyone else do the same, I'm just sharing personal experience with using other shipping avenues.
EDIT: FWIW, just looked through old emails between myself and client where they were required to provide their own cargo insurance and I would pay $500 towards the deductible if there was any damage.Last edited: Feb 3, 2017
Reason for edit: Added info
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