Parking the truck at the company facility is a HUGE benefit, especially if it's the closer location of the 2 choices of companies. TOO MANY newbies think being able to bring the truck home is a big benefit. It's not for most people. It creates more problems than it solves and it means you have to donate free-time to sitting around while your truck gets serviced either before you start, during the week, or before you go home after being on the road.
New Class A holder got a question for everyone.
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Miles0317, Apr 22, 2025.
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I park my rig at the company's terminal -- then drive home for a 2-hour trip.
Every week.
It's doable.
-- Ltscottme and nextgentrucker Thank this. -
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Last edited: Apr 22, 2025
Chi Town Steers and nextgentrucker Thank this. -
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Maybe you should buy a car?nextgentrucker Thanks this. -
Go flatbed. It’s the best way to learn. Have to think about so much more than a van.
nextgentrucker Thanks this. -
Having a place nearby to park truck is a big plus in my opinion. Most drivers leave trucks at truck stops. So you have have a local truck stop near by your home. Plus hopefully they won’t tow it if they notice it sitting there empty. If you take 3 days off nobody will notice but if take a weeks vacation or two then it more of a problem.
The training part of two guys sharing a motel room and two guys working and living in a truck sounds very weird at first. I had to share motel room never liked it but did lean most guys are ok and cool. I even did the trainer thing for about 2 years. You notice that nobody is really comfortable at first. I think it because everyone is worries about privacy and it not normal. People that drive trucks also enjoy being alone more then being around others people most times.
What I leaned was all guys are basically the same You lean that people don’t have to judge each for no reason. Everyone’s hair is a mess in the morning so who cares?nextgentrucker Thanks this. -
I never did flat bed but seem them tarping and strapping loads in the summer heat and humidity and it doesn’t look like fun for $75 or whatever they get. Then in the winter cold and windy days. The heat and humidity can be brutal down south. I remember being by Dallas TX and they talking how it been 30+ day above 100F. It feels like you in oven when you get above 100F. I can’t imagine doing flatbread in that heat.
nextgentrucker Thanks this.
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