So I've been doing a lot of research on Swift and ran into what seems to be a fairly big topic. It has to do with Swift trucks not having APUs, very hot summer days, and state idling laws.
I'm sure you all know every side of that story so I won't make an entire topic for it... how do people handle this situation? So how do you sleep when it's really hot and you can't idle? I may not be a trucker (yet) but common sense tells me it isn't a good idea to sleep with your windows down in a truck stop.
I know Swift trucks now have inverters... but I don't think that does anything with regard to the AC, does it?
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Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by NewTruckerGuy, May 1, 2024.
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Make sure you talk to current working drivers, doing the work you are being hired to do, before you accept any driving job. You cannot do a good job search online only (read company web page, communicate with company "recruiter"). The easy method produces an 80-90% failure rate. Failure, in this case, is leaving the industry before 12 months of experience. 80-90% failure is what newbies are experiencing now. Nothing the recruiter says should be understood as a "promise". It's a guess or a lie many times. Recruiters are car salesmen, not consumer advocates or detectives. Newbie may ask "will my truck have a swimming pool & basketball court?" Recruiter: I'll ask the company, I think those are standard in all new trucks." Newbie may ask "how much does the job pay?" Recruiter may answer "our top 50% average $78k per year".Btw, when a recruiter says "let me ask the company & get back to you", they forget to give you an answer.Bud A. and NewTruckerGuy Thank this. -
NewTruckerGuy and bryan21384 Thank this.
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wilsonlogistics.com
Wilson Logistics
3769 E Evergreen St, Springfield, MO 65803bryan21384 Thanks this. -
In general it won't idle between about 35 degrees to around 70 degrees, but below or above those temps it will.
OptiIdle also will turn on the engine if the battery voltage gets too low.Bud A., NewTruckerGuy and lual Thank this. -
Tankers you get into chemicals, hydrochloric ancid, phosphoric acid(which are also in some sodas) and such, unless food grade then alcoholic beverages and such for flammable.
I’ve hauled some super bad things in tankers, when it hits air it’ll react and turn to a gas cloud, and they don’t want to tell you technical names so it’ll be some long drawn out name.
Hauling something like furfural.
I can remember that name cause i hauled a ton of it.
But having haz, it’ll open more loads such as paints, pesticides, and things vs DH back, as long as they pay extra for hazmat hauling.Blu_Ogre and NewTruckerGuy Thank this. -
You mention military experience. I'd also suggest looking into the VR&E program...it was pretty easy to get it going and as long as a trucking school is on their approved list, they'll pay for it.
This way you can seamlessly get your endorsements and avoid an automatic restriction on your CDL. Perhaps most importantly you can go to a starter company without owing any amount of time. Prime was a good starter experience for me so I stayed for a year anyway, but there's peace of mind knowing that you can leave without owing anything if a company is really not a good fit.Blu_Ogre, Chinatown, NewTruckerGuy and 1 other person Thank this.
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