Do you have to back up double and triple trailers?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by MaybeAFutureTrucker, Apr 15, 2025.

  1. Ex-Trucker Alex

    Ex-Trucker Alex Road Train Member

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    The first rule of trucking:
    NO MATTER WHAT YOU ARE DRIVING, EVENTUALLY YOU WILL HAVE TO BACK IT UP.

    And, FWIW, doubles aren't easy to back up, but it's not impossible. Even triples. Hell, I saw a video from Australia where a guy was backing QUADS up. One other video of a line-haul driver DOCKING B-train triples from the rear trailer up to the lead.
     
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  3. tscottme

    tscottme Road Train Member

    USUALLY pulling doubles is not something you walk into. It's usually a job that requires a few years of experience before they select one of the 400 applications on file to replace the driver that just retired or died. The really good companies you show up a work, check in, get your paperwork, find your already made up set, hook up, pre-trip, drive, arrive, drop trailers and paperwork, hook your return set of trailers and get paperwork, drive home, drop trailers & paperwork, go home. Wash, rinse, repeat until you retire. You may have a steady predictable schedule and can plan social events. Typically your clothes never get dirty and you sleep at home. Often the job is done overnight for decades.
     
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  4. nextgentrucker

    nextgentrucker Road Train Member

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    ####, I didn't know it was that rare, sounds like a dream job, well, Tanker it is then.
     
  5. Gomer1969

    Gomer1969 Light Load Member

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    I'd rather pull doubles than a 53
     
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  6. nextgentrucker

    nextgentrucker Road Train Member

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    Cool.
     
  7. nextgentrucker

    nextgentrucker Road Train Member

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    Btw, when do you usually end your day, I know most of you guys drive at night in that gig, but I'm just wondering about the work-life balance in it.
     
  8. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

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  9. Hawkeye72

    Hawkeye72 Light Load Member

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    Every company does things a little different but here at fxf pm runs usually gate between 18:00-21:00 and are 9-11 hours.
    Just depends on how many people on bid and bid number.
     
  10. Ex-Trucker Alex

    Ex-Trucker Alex Road Train Member

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    Well, that's the way it was, circa 1990. Then all those Teamster LTL haulers started to close. Those few left today have a pool of former Teamsters who get first crack at any new position. That world is now essentially gone.

    Today, Amazon will let any idiot drive wiggle-wagons; and they regularly DO!
     
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  11. tscottme

    tscottme Road Train Member

    I worked for a full-service company that did everything. I normally pulled 53 ft dry vans but on rare occasions I would pull doubles if they couldn't find something else. I was OTR not LTL so my contact with doubles was an exception. Generally the companies doing LTL/Doubles work Sun-Thur overnight. I worked at another company on that schedule and it was fantastic for a single loner that liked driving overnight. I'm a vampire/night owl so I loved it. It DIDN'T want to socialize & revert to a normal day schedule. Driving overnight is trucking on easy mode UNLESS you try to mix in family & friends on a daytime schedule on your days off. If you do that you will throw away at least 1 "night's" sleep per week and be tired at least 1 night per week. So work life balance depends on how much work & how much life you are trying to squeeze in & when.

    Driving overnight is about as easy as is possible to make money in trucking. Some companies pay a lot and some pay average. I don't spend money so I stacked cash earning in the 50s. I retired early because I am careful with money. Lots of people are reckless with money & blame rich people for not giving away enough money to make THEM rich.
     
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