Double Yellow's Company Driver to Independent Thread

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by double yellow, Nov 5, 2014.

  1. Blu_Ogre

    Blu_Ogre Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Jul 14, 2013
    Messages:
    8,157
    Thanks Received:
    48,072
    Location:
    Out west
    0
    There is room for advancement from "generic truck" I call it specialization. If you can do something that makes you different from a "Generic truck" people will pay a premium for premium services. Even in the bad times they will pay a premium.

    I pull around a 53 foot dry van. About as generic as you can get. However about half my loads use my tank and Haz endorsements.

    I also tend to run a high percentage of trade show loads. A few load bars and a couple of dozen straps open up those customers if you get a trailer with vertical E-track.

    Trade show folks are hinting that I should get a lift gate put on my trailer. If I do that correctly it will increase my light weight to the point scaling the heavier chemical loads would be a concern.

    Throw in the Canadian F.A.S.T. Pass, T.W.I.C card, TSA Certification, and any other proof you can roll where needed..... It's all about being able to fix somebody else's sticky situation.
     
  2. roundhouse

    roundhouse Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Jul 11, 2018
    Messages:
    3,141
    Thanks Received:
    7,096
    0

    In the late 90s my wife was stationed at Kessler AFB in Biloxi
    And the main freight there was bananas

    They came into the port there and paid $1.25 a mile when most freight was 75 cents

    Only catch was they would unload the containers and have em ready about 4:00 PM and they wanted em delivered before 6:30 AM in Chicago , Bluefield And Parkersburg WV and Salem MO etc

    900 miles and 14 hours to be there

    The hurricane wiped out the pier and port
    No idea if they still come in there or not

    A couple years later I bought a cabover international with the set back steer axle and it only weighed 15,000 and 12 of that was on the steers

    So I could scale some loads that other drivers couldn’t
     
    MagnumaMoose, Blu_Ogre and scottied67 Thank this.
  3. scottied67

    scottied67 Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Mar 14, 2010
    Messages:
    10,818
    Thanks Received:
    12,622
    Location:
    california norte
    0
    I'm reading a biography of Charles Goodnight. In 1881 freight costs were $0.01 per 100 pounds per mile coming into the Texas Panhandle. I think it is cheaper now.
     
  4. PoleCrusher

    PoleCrusher Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Aug 26, 2014
    Messages:
    7,503
    Thanks Received:
    82,190
    Location:
    LLMF
    0
    $.01 in 1881 would be the equivalent of $.26 today.
     
  5. Blu_Ogre

    Blu_Ogre Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Jul 14, 2013
    Messages:
    8,157
    Thanks Received:
    48,072
    Location:
    Out west
    0
    40,000 pound load would would pay $4 per mile in 1881 money? so $100 per mile in today money?
     
    SL3406 Thanks this.
  6. Blu_Ogre

    Blu_Ogre Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Jul 14, 2013
    Messages:
    8,157
    Thanks Received:
    48,072
    Location:
    Out west
    0
    I've hauled quite a few banana loads that came into Gulfport Ms just around the corner from Biloxi.
    Most were going to Cincinnati and Indy grocery wholesalers.
     
    MagnumaMoose Thanks this.
  7. scottied67

    scottied67 Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Mar 14, 2010
    Messages:
    10,818
    Thanks Received:
    12,622
    Location:
    california norte
    0
    The mule and oxen freighters had to get paid a lot going in because they had to deadhead back empty. I think the native indigenous people had already been sent to reservations by then as well, but freighters still used that excuse of the dangers of the route to boost rates also.
     
    Lepton1 Thanks this.
  8. RedForeman

    RedForeman Momentum Conservationist

    Joined:
    Jan 30, 2011
    Messages:
    4,875
    Thanks Received:
    22,138
    0
    They go everywhere. We were doing them too. Dole bananas and pineapples straight out of the container at the ship dock. I would get them from a small broker in Lafayette LA. The rates nosedived a few years ago and I quit calling them. I have no idea what they're doing now. I didn't leave anything in Gulfport so haven't been looking.
     
    Tug Toy, Blu_Ogre and MagnumaMoose Thank this.
  9. Mattflat362

    Mattflat362 Road Train Member

    Joined:
    Feb 18, 2015
    Messages:
    2,696
    Thanks Received:
    5,723
    Location:
    Avon Lake, Ohio
    0
    Missed this thread when getting set up in 2015.

    Still very good reading...
     
  10. otterinthewater

    otterinthewater Road Train Member

    Joined:
    May 10, 2018
    Messages:
    5,520
    Thanks Received:
    29,040
    Location:
    Santa Barbara, Ca
    0
    I’m waiting to re-read it on the 1 year anniversary of me being a driver. This thread helped me in many ways...and I can’t wait to experience it again. Thanks again @double yellow