TransAm Trucking, Inc. - Olathe, Ks.?

Discussion in 'Motor Carrier Questions - The Inside Scoop' started by tjgosurf, Aug 29, 2006.

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  1. Cranky Yankee

    Cranky Yankee Cranky old ######

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    Miss Patty says I dont want to get back to green Bay because I am going to have a colostomy when I get back
     
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  3. HometimeQueen

    HometimeQueen Road Train Member

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    Weeelllll......I don't blame ya, I'd stay in California too!
     
  4. HometimeQueen

    HometimeQueen Road Train Member

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    According to WKBN, authorities in Ohio and Pennsylvania are teaming up to crack down on unsafe trucks.
    The Ohio State Highway Patrol and Pennsylvania State Police Commercial Enforcement last week kicked off a months-long commercial vehicle enforcement campaign to crack down on truck violations.
    WKBN reported that officers will be targeting trucks “committing crash-causing violations such as following too closely and unsafe speed.” The officers will be focusing their efforts on Interstate 80.
    “Warmer weather is on its way, which increases traffic. When there is more traffic, there will be more cashes,” said Lt. Marvin Hill of the Ohio State Highway Patrol’s investigative unit told WKBN.
    Officers in Pennsylvania and Ohio will be communicating across state lines and will coordinate enforcement times and random inspections.
    The blitz kicked off last Wednesday and will continue through the summer.
     
  5. jaso36

    jaso36 Medium Load Member

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    In Oak Grove, Mo. did a swap that will get me closer to home in case they cant get me home I will just go home. This load delivers near Nashville to Tyson.

    HTQ my wife said everything is fine just rain and a little bit of wind. We live in the Pinehurst area and she works on that golf course, she said these golfers are crazy to be playing out there in weather like this.

    Wayne it does get better. It is so hard in the beginning cause it aint just the driving it is being away from home and always in unfamiliar territory but one day it will just click.

    Krazyhorsechik when you go into Walmart parking lots you should be checking out where the exit is and try to face that direction cause sometimes the 4 wheelers and trucks will block you in if you are faced in the wrong direction. I always look at how to get out even in truck stops.

    Cranky I do not blame you I would never leave Ca if that is what I had to come home to. Good luck to when you get that done I hope you get good results

    Be safe out there
     
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  6. HometimeQueen

    HometimeQueen Road Train Member

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    You were getting a body wash at the trailer wash???:biggrin_2554::biggrin_2559::biggrin_25521:
     
  7. Panhandle flash

    Panhandle flash Road Train Member

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    And??????????
    And I gotta tell ya, them's some high pressure hoses!!!!!
     
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  8. gamma

    gamma Light Load Member

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    Stopped in San Antonio Florida for the night... Seen some crazy weather and made friends with a squirrel today... Hope eveeryone is safe and good luck out there
     
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  9. HometimeQueen

    HometimeQueen Road Train Member

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    Neat idea .....especially the no more snow and ice on the roadways part

    About 8 years ago, an electrical engineer and his counselor wife started throwing around an idea to replace asphalt on highways and byways throughout the US with electricity-producing solar panels that were tough enough to be driven upon. The idea blossomed into a project, where the panels featured built-in LEDs that could “paint the road” with markings and warnings, and could be heated to prevent snow and ice build up. The US Federal Highway Administration paid for the couple to produce a working prototype, which they did, and then again to expand the concept into an operational parking lot setup. As the latter contract comes to an end, the Solar Roadways project has released photos of the (almost) completed installation at its Idaho electronics lab. Now the team is dipping into crowd-funding waters with a campaign to raise funds for the move into commercial production.
    Many roads, highways, parking lots or driveways can spend much their daytime unused. Sunlight can even break through gridlock to the road below. In 2006, Scott and Julie Brusaw hatched a plan to make use of all that untapped energy by replacing asphalt with toughened PV panels that would also include embedded lighting to act as road markings and driver alerts, as well as communication and power cables to replace overhead lines. The project received funding from the US Dept of Transportation to the tune of US$100,000 in August 2009, and work began on the first proof-of-concept prototype.
    By February 2010, the first 12 x 12 ft (3.7 x 3.7 m) road panel (made up of 16 smaller connected panels) was ready, complete with embedded LEDs that could be programmed to deliver custom messages. The proof-of-concept Phase I prototype didn’t include any PV cells and lacked the custom-hardened glass with integrated heating element for the upper face, but it served to demonstrate that the proposed electronics worked as promised. The team also built smaller crosswalk panels featuring load cells to test a pedestrian/wildlife detection mechanism, which would flash instructions to slow down when a weight was detected on the surface.
    Around this time, Scott Brusaw was invited to give a TED talk in Sacramento (which is worth a watch as it details much of the project’s inspiration, history and aims), and the project went on to win first prize in two of GE’s Ecomagination challenges.
    [​IMG]
    After entertaining the world media circus for a while, and traveling around the country to deliver talks on the project, funding was secured in June of 2011 for the second phase of development – to create fully functional parking lot.
    Work on the electronics began immediately, and a site next to the electronics lab prepared for ground breaking. The Brusaws and their small, but dedicated, team of volunteers revealed a new hexagonal road panel design in July 2013, that would allow them “to handle curves easily and we designed the shape, macro and micro textures for stability, traction, strength.” The first batch of the completed new panels were ready for installation and testing by September.
    Spin forward to the end of last month, and the first photos of the now operational Solar Roadwaysparking lot were released. Each of the new panels features PV cells and circuit boards, 128 programmable LEDs, a heating element to help deal with ice and snow, and are topped with “super-strength” textured glass (which has exceeded expectations in load, traction and impact resistance testing).


    “Half of our prototype parking lot is mono-crystalline, while the other half is poly-crystalline,” Julie Brusaw told Gizmag. “The parking lot is equivalent to a 3600-watt solar array. The power collected is dependent upon the amount of sunshine received. So as with all solar, it will produce more in some parts of the country and world than others.”
    “We’ve moved power and data cables to a Cable Corridor alongside the road/parking lot,” she continued. “This provides easy access the power/data companies. It will give the cables a home and eliminate the need for overhead wires that are unsightly and subject to ice/breakage. The other way the power companies are handling it now is to bury them (sometimes right next to gas lines) in the dirt and dig them up with a shovel for access. So we can make utility companies’ work much easier and safer. Our system can also eliminate cell phone dead spots by installing a ‘leaky’ cable in the Cable Corridor. Our corridor can be a home for all kinds of cables including TV, fiber optic for high speed internet, phone, etc.”
    A section in the installation’s Cable Corridor has been included to store, treat and redistribute storm water, and the Brusaws sourced recycled glass and were able to incorporate 10 percent in the aggregate of the base layer of the prototype.
    [​IMG]
    Currently, some 69 percent of the layer directly under the glass of each hexagonal unit is made up of photovoltaic cells, but that will increase to 100 percent prior to commercial production. Before that can happen, though, the Solar Roadways project has hit Indiegogo (starting, appropriately enough, on Earth Day) to help raise enough money to hire a team of engineers and other professionals, streamline the production process and move into manufacturing proper.
    A lofty funding target of $1 million has been set, and the project will receive all funding, even if the campaign goal is not met. Rewards include t-shirts, coffee mugs, a backer’s name engraved on one of the prototype’s 396 mounting hole covers, and samples of the toughened glass.
    The campaign video below brings the Solar Roadways story bang up to date.
     
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  10. krazyhorsechick

    krazyhorsechick Medium Load Member

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    Im at jbs in IA does any one know were I will scale here. Im not leaving im out of time so I will head out tomorrow. I put 3 porkchops and bbq sauce in the crock pot yesterday and it came out great. Today left overs. Cranky just think good thoughts, htq thanx for the weather updates they help a lot.
     
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  11. HometimeQueen

    HometimeQueen Road Train Member

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    And ....I'm still playing nurse!:biggrin_255:
     
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