63mph vs 65 mph

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by pauly da trucker, Jun 27, 2012.

  1. BlackLions

    BlackLions Road Train Member

    I'll run 58-62mph loaded and same or 65 empty. Couple times I ran 70mph or so but 99% of the time no need for it.
     
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  3. MNdriver

    MNdriver Road Train Member

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    I should clarify that for WEST of Lincoln NE.

    Doing 66 out to Idaho for me last week, I was sitting still compared to trucks passing me.
     
    SHC Thanks this.
  4. otherhalftw

    otherhalftw R.I.P.

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    Must have been a tail wind across Elk Mountain zone!

    Geee....I almost miss that piece of road......NOT!!!
     
  5. Roadmedic

    Roadmedic Road Train Member

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    How could you miss it?
     
  6. otherhalftw

    otherhalftw R.I.P.

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    Oh I don't know....turn right onto 70 off 15 maybe????
     
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  7. Roadmedic

    Roadmedic Road Train Member

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    I always forget about it and then take a load out that way and remember why I do not like it.
     
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  8. MNdriver

    MNdriver Road Train Member

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    I was debating if I even wanted to share this. Figured what the hell, why not feed the fire some more.

    WHY is time more important than fuel? Because when you minimize the time you spend on a load, you can carry MORE LOADS. I am not advocating speeding or running 80 mph. I am advocating that you manage your time to its fullest and get out from under a load as quickly as possible.

    You have to accept that both FUEL AND TIME are a valuable commodity to get the load in. Saving you both money, time and fuel.

    The first sheet is what happens when you look at $2.50 gallon fuel. What is the break even speed. Where Overhead and fuel cost are matching. It's right around 64-65 mph.

    When you toss in fuel cost to $3.50 per gallon, it cuts that speed WAY back to 54-55 mph.


    To get your speed back, you need to seriously improve your mileage and to get to 8.8 mpg at 63 MPH to the OP original question, it gives you a break even speed of 64-65 MPH.

    Oh, but that's just academics....Well, so is the 0.1 MPG for every 1 MPH speed you change. If it's only academics, then why do every CDL mill company have a staff full of academic bean counters telling them to run a truck at X speed.

    The one thing you will or should notice. No matter what the speed/time. The over all cost for fuel and time pretty much evens out. So what you loose in time, you gain in fuel. What you gain in time, you loose in fuel.


    The kicker comes when you can get out of a load quicker and increase your revenue by picking up that extra load per week by getting out from under that last load an extra day or half-day early because you kept the left door closed and maximized your efforts to deliver the load on-time or early.
     
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  9. otherhalftw

    otherhalftw R.I.P.

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    I like fuel fed fires!!!!!

    I won't quibble with simple arithmatic...Fuel v speed, speed v fuel...your analysis is correct. So I did not see the need to bring that part forward in the quote. As to the final paragraph:

    Whether it be fleet or individual driver, that final analysis actually applies to "robot mentality"...the same philosophy (arguments pro/con for assembly line)...what is not factored in that simplistic approach is the human factor. Humans are not robots...even though company mentality streams that way...humans need some down time to "re-charge", to unwind, to be fresh, and to be comaptible with the "work ethic" instilled in our livelihood!
     
  10. dude6710

    dude6710 Road Train Member

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    if the truck profits 1.2xxx a mile your doing just fine. Who cares about fuel, id rather pay for fuel then junk not working correctly and breaking down.
     
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  11. MNdriver

    MNdriver Road Train Member

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    As an o/o, why would i want to be out for 10 days, when i could get home in 8. It's not about running the miles, but pulling the revenue in. With high enough paying loads or quantity.

    Want to save fuel money, don't turn the tires at all.

    I'd rather turn the fishing pole.
     
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