I've noticed that majority of companies always give the new drivers the Freightliner Cascadia. For a while I've always wondered why.....
Are they cheaper to repair in case the newbie crashes if or something?
My current company gave me a cascadia which I'm pretty sure has been in an accident in the past because under the hood most of the parts are brand new, the bumper itself is a different color. 2016 and only has 65600 miles on it. Pretty strange if you ask me.... The side of the air fairing is broken at the top so whenever I roll into the truck stop people are probably gonna think I did it -_-
New drivers and Cascadia's
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Canadianhauler21, Feb 28, 2019.
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Companies usually are replacing their trucks enmasse. 500 trucks to be replaced in one shot. So these companies send a buyer out to listen to what a company has to offer. Most of the companies are indeed running freightliners, yet some of that is also because the company has always run freightliners.
So the buyer goes out and asks what ever rep what kind of deal will you do for our company if we buy 500 trucks. That rep might tell them from Freightliner we will sell you the 500 trucks at 90k for each truck. Meanwhile the buyer may have gone to volvo and was told 95k per truck and so on. I hope this answers why freightliner.
Cascadia line is what replaced the line of trucks known as Century. Having visited Freightliner.com, I see they no longer have Columbias (their cheapest brand of truck) or Columbia (the freightliner cadillac). Commercial Truck Innovation | Freightliner Trucks It is only a guess that Freightliner has put all their eggs in one basket and are only selling what people want and have dropped the variants due to a lack of interestOmega1, magoo68 and Canadianhauler21 Thank this. -
Cascadia makes you sure it has been in a wreck in the past? Don’t worry. They make them that way from the factory.
Upinsmoke, magoo68, lovesthedrive and 1 other person Thank this. -
My team partner and I had our choice of a Volvo, International, or Freightliner...all were new 2019 models.
We chose the new Freightliner because it had a fridge and a TV mount. I put in a microwave and a TV...life is good. We have 36k on it now, and it has been trouble free.
I imagine the Freightliner Cascadia is a lot like the Crown Victorias I drove for 25 years as a cop...they work, are relatively economical to purchase, and have good dealer support.Omega1, magoo68, lovesthedrive and 1 other person Thank this. -
Cascadias are one the very few brands you can get engine work done at places other than the stealership .. I find them ugly but for the most part they are the most dependable
lovesthedrive, Canadianhauler21 and Brettj3876 Thank this. -
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I like the 2019 T680 I'm in now but have to admit, it has a smaller cab, bunk, and less storage than the 2019 Cascadia I gave up. The cab is also noisier. The KW looks better, but in my opinion doesn't out perform the the same year model Cascadia.
Canadianhauler21 Thanks this. -
Cascadia was redesigned to accommodate the aftertreatment devive, the floor was raised enough to be noticeable, Columbia couldn't accommodate it that design dates back to 2000 or thereabouts, Century to 97 or so.
I've put half a million miles on Cascadias since August of 2012, most in 1 truck I got with 2k miles on it.
The Evolution I'm driving now is quieter, and has some other issues tweaked, that 1 had a team running it the first year, and has about 250 k on it as of now.
The fleet spec since 2014 has seats with Isri components, that alone is a big improvement.Canadianhauler21 and Omega1 Thank this.
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