I average 50-55 hours a week. My previous terminal was 60+ but alot of that was due to the trucks were stored at one location and our Fillzone was several miles away, across a river, in another state and both sucked to get to in morning and even traffic. It really depending the terminal and how they run. My current barn doesnt do layovers and we dont work more than 5 days a week. My previous one, I usually worked 6 days and we did layovers every month. Sometimes customer plants go down and its balls to the wall.
The Cryo Hauler Thread
Discussion in 'Tanker, Bulk and Dump Trucking Forum' started by Cali kid, Mar 16, 2023.
Page 244 of 244
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I say we average 50-60 hours per week on a 5 day work week. About 1-2 layovers per month and the occasional 65-70hr work week.Bridge To Hawaii and lual Thank this.
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At my barn you worked the run given to you. If you were a runner the other guys would let you know since the standards for any given trip was based on previous runs by different drivers.
You need to be able to work when the work is there.
And if you can't you won't last long.Bridge To Hawaii Thanks this. -
I presume runs will vary a bit. I am a long term owner operator, mostly dry van, but have hauled hydrogen for one of our agents using a customer trailer, which was used to run forklifts in distribution centers. I recall a plant shutdown being a stressful event, but the big boys saved the day!
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I have owned a truck for the entirety of my 30+ year career. Loved the flexibility it gave me, but I've recently got rid of my 2006 Freightliner Columbia and not looking to buy another truck due to costs and regulatory uncertainty. So I'm looking at company driving jobs that pay decent. I prefer being physically active rather than driving almost constantly. However I am a bit concerned about expectation differences between myself and what a company expects from their employees. Is there such a thing as ride alongs?Dennixx Thanks this.
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I retired 4 months ago after 51 accident free yrs trucking, w the last 16 at Linde. They are dispatched (planned) each day from N.Y. and while you may know your next days schedule, it can always change because of customer use rates and they try not to run customers out.
Now some runs are set in stone as are most layovers because they are far out or not close to others for a dump out..
Your day maybe driving 5 hours, unload 1 or 2 stops and the head home.
Next day maybe you do 4 trips but don't even turn 25 miles.
We always had guys that like in-town days vs the guys that like road runs.
I liked any that gave me a full days pay ($600+) till my last 2 years and then 60hrs, give or take was fine.
The planners you will get to know what you like as well as your plant/driver manager.
You are also given like 20 paid days your 1st year and always have 2 days in a row off.
Plus the benefits are good.
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