1 Truck, 2 or 3 Drivers, What do you think?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by MikeinNeb, Apr 15, 2020.
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No.
An emphatic no.
You've never been screwed until you do business with family.
Did I say no ?Dino soar, DougA, Crude Truckin' and 6 others Thank this. -
MikeinNeb, Crude Truckin' and buddyd157 Thank this.
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i'll bet dollars to donuts you'll be back here in a few weeks to a few months, telling us of your problems, and wanting advice again, which you will NOT listen to.
i think that you'll do excellent, cuz "you know it all".....Crude Truckin' Thanks this. -
i am guessing a solid...NO
so what does this tell me..??
HE CAN HANDLE HIMSELF....
i think in all seriousness, it is YOU THAT NEEDS THAT SUPPORT CRUTCH......
set him free, like a little bird, to spread his OWN WINGS with out you being a "helicopter brother"
meaning of helicopter parent, but substitute brother in place of parent
.A helicopter parent (also called a cosseting parent or simply a cosseter)[1] is a parent who pays extremely close attention to a child's or children's experiences and problems, particularly at educational institutions. Helicopter parents are so named because, like helicopters, they "hover overhead", overseeing every aspect of their child's life constantly.[/QUOTE]Crude Truckin' Thanks this. -
So just to clarify, as a mechanical engineer who’s designed boiler and chiller plants for commercial facilities for 32 years, who deals with operations, utilization, maintainance, control, and replacement of major equipment every day, who takes nuclear engineering courses on-line to meet my Professional Engineer continuing education requirements…The answer is yes, I know more than you do about pretty much everything; From mechanical systems to human nature. And over those 32 years, I’ve had to deal with dozens of people like you; Very big mouths with very little brains. The best way to go about that is to make them, and you, look stupid. Congratulations Buddy!! Nice cleavage.
Let’s start with the actual analysis of a major piece of mechanical equipment; A semi- truck. I appreciate Ridgeline’s insight on some of the efforts and expenses required to verify the condition of used equipment; “And you don't buy a truck without putting it on a dyno, getting a blowby test with the dyno, and the rest if the steps that costs $1000 to $2400. You don't buy blind spot unless you have the capital to cover the loses,”
And I know well that million dollar pieces of operating equipment require ongoing maintenance, intermittent, minor, and major over that equipment’s lifetime; Recording that maintenance is part and parcel of that process.
But Buddy says “Forget all that!!” He’s got a tractor mechanic buddy (not his brother in law) who’ll tell you all you need to know about that truck by looking it over and licking the inside of the exhaust pipe. And all he charges is $50, plus a 12 pack!! -
Ya, trolls aren't gonna last long here. Good luck to you, Mr. Intelligent. You're gonna need it.
Who else sees this thread getting a lock on it?Rubber duck kw and buddyd157 Thank this. -
npok, buddyd157 and Crude Truckin' Thank this.
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This industry lacks structure.
I know a little about boilers and power generation, so I know a little about the record keeping they use for maintaince.
This industry has no maintenance record keeping requirements or stadards which makes it more important for someone to evaluate a potential truck with their own tools and tests and use the maintenance records as a guide to locate other problems because 80% of the time they are incomplete - even factory records are incomplete or inaccurate.
Now one other thing is the people who are here posting some comments are those with experiences, they look at it differently but from the inside looking out and are very important to listen too. I know people like you don't seem to understand that, I earned more than one degree and worked for the past 50 plus years at different jobs so I say I know where you are coming from and dealt with the idiots too. But it behoves you to take some advice seriously because of two reasons
1-we are in a down turn that many of us hoped would happen. Many who have fleets and even one truck operations have seen boom and bust more than once and every time it has to do with capacity of the industry. Thanks to trump (not political), we have seen a very weird sustaining of an expansion of capacity because of the rate increases of 2017 onward and the depression of rates because of overcapacity which would have contracted by now. With this virus crap, we finally have capacity contracting and this is good for all, but very bad for new startups who think this is easy, especially those who are over depending on spot or brokered freight. The next thing many of us hope is brokers go under which will help everyone.
2- the fact that you are not a business centric person is a problem, it takes a while for people to learn this business. its not like other businesses and you have to be disciplined enough to forsake profit (pay check) to keep it going if needed at the same time change strategies to capture revenue. The number one reason for failure is lack of experience which always leads to mismanagement and the other is lack of capital or a willingness to tap capital. With an average 85% of new operations failing within 2 years, it is importatn that anyone who wants to enter this to be flexible, have 6 months operating capital banked (without payroll) and willing to wait for that first check, beside other things I mentioned.
So your idea, bad idea. It has been tried and failed no matter who thinks they can make it work.
Best of luck to you.lsnook24, buddyd157, Midwest Trucker and 1 other person Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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