Well, just to clarify… I'm not getting into a lease with any company. When I first started, I was definitely all about getting into a lease as soon as I could. But then I started looking at the numbers closely. My plan is to stay as a company driver for at least two years. I want to have a down payment and financing for my first truck, so however long it takes to qualify financially, that's when I will buy my first truck.
Thank you for your comments. I know that I do know a lot about failing in business because I have done that several times already. I know a lot about finance, accounting, real estate, restaurants, and construction. But I don't know squat about the trucking industry, and I know that. I'm here to listen and learn. I'm here to lay out my ideas and see who tells me it's stupid and why. That's why I'm not planning to do a lease anymore.
This is the only place I can work as an employee and make enough money to support my family until I can get into the entrepreneurial side of it. So I'm here, I'm hungry but not willing to do anything stupid to satisfy that hunger, I'm ready to learn, and I really appreciate everybody with experience chiming in.
What would an experienced o/o buy?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Texzonie, Jun 24, 2011.
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Thanks in advance. -
Airborne and csmith1281 Thank this.
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What it means it you are walking around the barn instead of walking through it.
In other words your search for info may confuse you more without taking the first steps in getting on the road.
Why I say this is you may box yourself in by thinking that there is only one type of freight or one way to setup your projections.
Get on the road, don't worry about the numbers just yet.
It will come together.Airborne and csmith1281 Thank this. -
Like someone else in this thread said years ago, a truck is a tool to make a living. It's great to have nice tools, but at a certain point, you are throwing money at bells and whistles on a depreciating asset, and those extras wont provide a return on investment. That's the way I see it anyway.Airborne Thanks this. -
Airborne, rollin coal, gokiddogo and 1 other person Thank this.
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I guess I'm stupid then. I'm currently sitting in the fifth truck I have owned, every single one has been a classic styled truck. I've made a lot of money over the years with my trucks. Could I have a little more had I only bought trucks based on efficiency? Sure, but money isn't everything either. My next truck will be somewhat of a combination of the two.
I sold my first house I bought several years ago and bought one that was a hell of a lot newer and bigger. It's nothing super special or fancy. But it's what we wanted, certainly didn't need it. I guess that was stupid too, since what we had was good enough. -
Airborne Thanks this.
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I guess I am in camp dumb dumb also then
The only real difference is a little bit poorer fuel economy. That debate has been had many times. I still refuse to believe if I had bought an aero truck with the same drive line that it would do much more than maybe .5 mpg above what I get now. That doesn't amount to much in my world. I am not interested in any manufacturers proprietary technology. No volvo stuff or detroit auto transmission for me. There is something to be said for enjoying time at work also, seeing the amount of time I spend in the thing. That is worth the extra expense to me. All the compliments I get are just icing on the cake. And I haven't even really dressed it up yet. Classic trucks are just that. It's a to each their own thing. I think running an aero truck at 60 mph trying to get the best fuel economy while being paid a fixed rate per mile isn't too smart. That doesn't make it wrong. It all boils down to there is more than one way to skin a cat.Airborne and csmith1281 Thank this.
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