I'm starting my 11th month with Swift. I have 5 more months experience than my trainer had when I got on his truck. I have 4 months more experience than he has presently. He quit driving a month later when his next student wouldn't run like me and he wasn't making any money.
That's pretty much what you can expect. Either someone with zero experience or someone who has been driving for 30 years that is like a trucker version of Al Bundy, always reliving their glory days and unable to adapt to the present reality of elogs and flipflops. Either you'll get a total newbie or a guy who is convinced trucking was safer when guys ran 3000 miles on cat naps and speed, while running around scales and keeping 3 logbooks.
Good luck. Just take your time and don't hit anything. Your real training begins when you get your own truck.
What to expect from your trainer?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by TruckerAce48, Sep 25, 2017.
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TripleSix, TruckerAce48, hoosiergirl and 1 other person Thank this.
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TruckerAce48 Thanks this.
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Does not matter how many years a trainer has been driving . Not all drivers are cut out for teaching , hell even basic human interaction. It's like rolling the dice .
TruckerAce48 and RedRover Thank this. -
here's my 2 cents, which isn't worth much, but I think choosing the right company is really important in figuring into whether you get a good trainer. If you choose a company that has you team drive with a trainer, well, how much are you really gonna learn if he's in the sleeper all the time. My husband chose a smaller company with just 1 (I think) trainer for his division. He had to wait about 3 weeks to start but his training was excellent.
Good luck -
mbolton1990, TripleSix and TruckerAce48 Thank this.
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Honestly I have no idea how many good there are vs how many bad. I've never worked for a mega or been with a real trainer. But even if a good sized majority of trainers are the bad sort, I imagine the constant dumping on trainers can be frustrating. -
Going into the winter months is how I started.
We had a couple chain up moments. Once he hired someone to help.
My advice is this...
If you have to chain up - shut down before you need to.
No load is worth the risk to yourself or others on the road.
I have seen too many trucks in the ditch or into other cars and trucks in those conditions.
And if you crash the truck, it will ALWAYS be a preventable accident!
!!! Period.
And it will always be your fault.
You are in control of your truck, and you can see the conditions that you are headed in to.
If you decide to push through, you are responsible for the results - good or bad.
If you send a message that you are 'shutting down because of unsafe conditions to drive', they will have no choice but to adhere to your determination of the situation. -
Trainers shouldn't have to teach the basics, they should be able to concentrate on all those little details that will make a student a polished professional.MrEd Thanks this. -
A mixed bag.
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