I have two things. A "stick" house and a Tractor. Rats can't catch my truck, & know better than to enter my home. I have a stack of new floor in the Bike shop.![]()
Thinking of selling the house for a Volvo 780 for non commercial use
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by klrman, Aug 2, 2013.
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Not to despair.. check out companies like Powerhouse and Renegade.A step down from the above is a bus. Check out Prevost and Bluebird (only used) , there's others.... Better built class c... LazyDazeHave fun.Mary
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Here is what you need http://www.truckpaper.com/listingsdetail/detail.aspx?OHID=4191225
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Very cool but quite an attention getter. Hard to fly under the radar with that! -
yes you do need a class A license.
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Thanks, some good leads to check out now, I appreciate it very much!
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There's many trucks on the road being used as RV's. Drive the speed limit, slow down when it rains, slow and easy in heavy traffic, park it when it's snow & ice. Park in RV parks or truck stops with RV parking. Talk to your DMV about license. Shouldn't need a CDL, but research that thoroughly. You would have to spend some money on it setting it up for RV park hookups. Idling laws would preclude you from idling in RV parks and many truck stops, so then you don't have heat & AC. You could get an APU installed, but your neighbors in the RV park would complain about the noise & fumes. Personally, I would just buy an RV.
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As other's have said, if your not making a profit, a truck cost to much to run.
Fuel, Truck 8-10 MPG Bobtail, RV 12-20
Bathroom, Truck no bathroom, Rv Full bath,
Cooking, Truck, none, Rv, full kition
Bed, Truck 1 or 2 single bunks, RV full queen or king
Drivability, Truck, handles poorly, RV designed for easy driving
Hard Braking on dry pavement, Truck may skid, RV brakes fine
Hard Braking on wet pavement, Truck will skid, RV probably fine
Curves, Truck High roll over risk, RV less risk
You have 2 options:
If you really want a truck, lease onto a carrier like landstar and only haul a load or 2 a week. Basically just haul enough to cover expenses and keep the tanks full. You can then choose your freight and go when and where you want. Only difference is, your fuel an maintenance is covered.
The other option is get a small DIESEL RV. http://www.gowinnebago.com/products/2014/via/ -
View attachment 52076 Get a Fifth wheel trailer and pull it with this. 12 mpg
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Take a look here, these folks all do this and can answer any of your questionshttp://www.rvnetwork.com/index.php?showforum=32
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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