1. Magnum1

    Magnum1 Medium Load Member

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    Dec 13, 2010
    NJ
    0
    I forgot to mention that the port was about 45-60 min one way.
     
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  3. roshea

    roshea Road Train Member

    We're talking about California ports, that is what the restriction is for. Trucks older than 2004 can not go into the ports, plus they have to be certified. This has been an ongoing story for quite awhile. More ports across the country are looking to adopt the CA regulations.

    Then there's also the BS about having to have a TWIC card, yet none of the ports have card readers. Many ports are back to requiring the driver pay to receive another ID card to enter their ports. Kind of defeats the purpose of the TWIC card doesn't it.
     
  4. Katz

    Katz Medium Load Member

    525
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    Jun 21, 2009
    Commiephonya
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    I ususally go to TCH's website at the end of a month, make the PDF file for the whole month, and type in the actual price in my spread sheet and it calculate the actual $/gal. I also save the PDF file as a record.


    One guy on another forum refer to them eco-nazi as watermelon. Green skin is a cover up for red commie inside LOL.

    I like clean air, but what CARB is doing makes no sense to me (unless they have some other intentions, or looking out for some comrades' interests). But I digress before Mods slap my hands for talking politics outside political section.
     
  5. roshea

    roshea Road Train Member

    I have the TCH account number and password added to the phone number. After I fuel I dial TCH and it auto-dials all the information, then press 1 for balance. I keep track of the balance after each purchase, then do the math and know the true cost. Since I want to load up my card to allow for emergency purchases I like to be on top of the balance. Plus I know my costs immediately. Especially useful since I started using mygauges to track mileage which eliminates need to spreadsheet. I can work on it from anywhere without needing my computer.

    I like going to CA, it would be such a great place if it wasn't for the screwed up politics.
     
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  6. Katz

    Katz Medium Load Member

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    Jun 21, 2009
    Commiephonya
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    Indeed it is a shame.
     
  7. REDD

    REDD The Legend

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    Dueling Banjoville
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    Katz.... Where did you find the fountain of youth?
     
  8. roshea

    roshea Road Train Member

    Katz - here's a shot of one of the mygauges screens. You can see how it skips calculating mpg for a partial fill, only put it is when designated as full. You can see trends easily. For this I can see when I had headwinds or near gross weight and unaerodynamic loads.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG][​IMG]
     
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  9. Katz

    Katz Medium Load Member

    525
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    Jun 21, 2009
    Commiephonya
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    Same place you did. I think you took a little too much though LOL.

    Thanks Ray. Looks like it handles the partial the same way as I do my spreadsheet. I guess my problem is I go too far between fill ups.

    I'm going to add CPM function on my spreadsheet. That seems like a good idea.
     
  10. roshea

    roshea Road Train Member

    These people need to get out of their offices and into the real world. Sitting for days between loads does not match what these industry analysts are saying in these types of report every day for the last several months.

    (Emphasis added in text is by me)






    Trucking showing strong hand-- but fuel remains wild card

    Mar 1, 2011 12:31 PM, By Sean Kilcarr, senior editor
    Metrics tracked by research firm FTR Associates indicates that trucking continues to build a strong hand, with freight volumes increasing as capacity remains tight. However, fuel prices remain a big wild card due to the recent run-up in oil prices, cautioned FTR president Eric Starks. He said this dynamic is negatively affecting carrier margins.


    “What we’re seeing now in terms of fuel prices is painful, certainly, but it’s not drastic yet,” Starks told Fleet Owner. “Carriers on the fringe are hurting as high fuel prices stress their cash flow. But if fuel keeps moving up, then it becomes a much broader concern as those fleets with ready access to cash spend it on fuel, not on new trucks, maintenance, etc.”
    Outside of the current fuel concern, trucking is in a much stronger position relative to the freight market. FTR said its Trucking Conditions Index (TCI) jumped to 9.1 in January from a December 2010 reading of 7.1, and it’s been rising steadily since October of last year.
    The firm noted that any TCI reading above zero indicates a healthy trucking environment, and FTR believes that continued economic growth combined with the impact of new safety regulations will produce sufficient freight to stress capacity sustaining an upward trend for the TCI until mid 2012.



    “Good freight demand and tightening capacity are allowing truckers to push freight rates higher. We expect to see significant movement as we leave the winter freight lull behind in March,” Starks added.


    However, he cautioned that challenges remain – with the high cost of fuel only one factor. “Significant cost increases are on the horizon, including higher equipment and labor costs,” Starks explained. “A major wild card is fuel prices. The recent sharp run-up in fuel costs due to Mideast unrest – a factor not yet reflected in the TCI – if sustained will put a great deal of pressure on marginal carriers.”
    He said the “time lag” between the increase in the cost of diesel and fleets’ ability to recover the cash spent via fuel surcharges will put stress on those carriers with shaky balance sheets, resulting in a potentially further tightening capacity as marginal carriers succumb.


    But this is also a very different trucking industry than the one that faced a similar oil price spike in 2008, Starks pointed out. “This time, capacity is very, very tight, so carriers can go to shippers and get rate increases because there’s literally no one else to turn to,” he said.

    Starks also thinks the industry’s current capacity footprint could allow it to handle significantly higher oil prices than in the past – event up to $150 per barrel – as long as such an increase is gradual.
    “We’ve noted in previous forecasts that we expected the price of oil to rise – we knew it would not stay flat as the global economy recovered,” he explained. “The challenge for the trucking industry today is handling the extreme volatility in oil prices. The industry the way it stands today could handle $150 per barrel oil, but it cannot handle it if such an increase occurs overnight. It’s the huge swing that kills you.”
    The additional concern with the current oil price run-up is that it could adversely affect the global economic recovery itself, Starks stressed.
    “If [oil prices] start to slow the overall economy down, that’s different. It won’t even be an inflationary issue – it’ll act like a massive tax increase,” he said. “That also creates a major ripple effect in trucking, putting a squeeze on freight activity and fuel costs simultaneously. We this isn’t where we end up.”
     
  11. REDD

    REDD The Legend

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    I'm always told to act my age.... So I figured it was easier to change my age.
     
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