Prime Reefer Drivers

Discussion in 'Prime' started by Swift338, Aug 30, 2011.

  1. Swift338

    Swift338 Light Load Member

    188
    13
    Jan 28, 2009
    statesville,NC
    0
    How Are your Miles and how much can you make running regional
     
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  3. OpenRoadDreamer

    OpenRoadDreamer Road Train Member

    6,225
    989
    Apr 26, 2011
    Alabama
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    My co-driver n I have been getting great miles
     
  4. da1

    da1 Road Train Member

    1,993
    145
    Jun 30, 2011
    SC
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    Lucky u just started tnt and haven't hit 5000/wk yet
     
  5. OpenRoadDreamer

    OpenRoadDreamer Road Train Member

    6,225
    989
    Apr 26, 2011
    Alabama
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    You will.... it all depends on your fleet manager n what he gets ya. And how far yall can run in a day
     
  6. ironpony

    ironpony Road Train Member

    17,502
    12,015
    Sep 23, 2007
    Ask my GPS...
    0
    They pay a premium on company regional in the northeast to make up for shorter runs. I averaged about 2800 miles a couple of years ago on the company side 48-state OTR.

    Hope you newer guys are keeping track of this stuff so we can update the "experience database!"
     
  7. rusty266

    rusty266 Light Load Member

    182
    40
    Sep 17, 2009
    Springfield, MO
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    Average over 3000 miles a week as a company driver, but not regional, I go where ever they send me. 3487, 2695, 3216, 3764 the last 4 weeks. The short week I sat for 3.5 days and did nothing, my FM was on vacation.
     
  8. jasper_truck86

    jasper_truck86 Light Load Member

    219
    22
    Sep 9, 2009
    Georgia
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    This question is geared toward IC's & the lease program. Read where Prime is guaranteeing 100,000 HHG miles/$102,000 revenue. If you work your fuel mileage to a T and keep all your ducks in a row, on average how much of that $102k can can you bring home as income?

    Also, on average, what is the general break-even point?

    I know I can't expect exact figures but just looking for rough estimates from current/former IC's with Prime. Oh yeah and before I forget, does Prime use elogs or paper?
     
  9. DragonTamerBrat

    DragonTamerBrat Road Train Member

    2,742
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    Jun 6, 2011
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    Can't answer the rest of your questions, but they use elogs.
     
  10. ironpony

    ironpony Road Train Member

    17,502
    12,015
    Sep 23, 2007
    Ask my GPS...
    0
    That's the guaranteed minimum linehaul revenue averaged over a 100,000-mile interval. Doesn't include fuel surcharge, and accessorial payments. If you're good at keeping your costs down, you can think about 25 to 30% ending up in your pocket. Through the end of the second quarter, I've been grossing around $1.73 per mile, but that will drop a bit this quarter - July sucked for me. I'm sure others had different experiences.

    Depends on your fixed costs of course... they vary for everyone depending on which truck you lease, where it is in its life-cycle, etc.

    I break-even at $1.25 per mile... its gone up a bit with fuel costs this year.

    Elogs - it really hasn't affected me. The additional data that the load planners get has kept me busier than when we were on paper logs.
     
    jasper_truck86 Thanks this.
  11. Dix_

    Dix_ Light Load Member

    153
    61
    Dec 11, 2010
    W.Poland, ME
    0
    Ditto what IP said... & I'll add a bit of how I work it....

    There are variables you have to take into account as to what your exact "break even" point will be for any given load... if you're running the northeast that point will be higher naturally than elsewhere... tolls, price of fuel along the route, what kind of fuel mileage you can expect on that route, etc, are all a part of the picture... so to nail down one set figure for any & all loads is an impossible task.... it varies.

    Then again, you may want to take a load that doesn't pay all that great simply because of where it's going to take you... I had a perfect example of that a couple weeks ago.

    I got sent a dairy "Charity Run" from Winchester VA to a Wal-Mart DC Shelbyville TN... pay was crap, it's heavy & you're in the mountains on I-81 & the TN hills of I-40 all the way... so fuel mileage will blow goats... the only good news is that fuel prices in VA & TN aren't too bad... so why would I take a load that ends up netting me about $300 for a 600 loaded mile trip?

    Well, for openers, the shipper has overnight parking available.... so I can hustle down there, do a 10 right in their lot & run it down in 1 shot... then when I get unloaded in Shelbyville I'll be sitting right on top of the Tyson plant right on the other end of town.

    Right on cue I get a Tyson 2 stopper ending up in WI... which when you add up the linehaul, fuel surcharges, & stop pay ended up over $1.80/mile... on a route that I can get near 8 MPG on.

    In the end I had one of my best weeks to date out of it... but if I'd turned down the Wal-Mart run I likely wouldn't have... sometimes you have to think about more than just the rate on that one load before you refuse it.
     
    chromewheelz and jasper_truck86 Thank this.
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