From those I've talked to, dont even bother with Prime...unless you got alot of Vaseline handy. I dont know about Wil-Tran, but I did lease a truck with ATS, and its pretty much the best lease program I ran across. I made $113,259.58 in 8 1/2 months. After expenses and taxes I cleared about $67,000. Its only a 12 month lease with a $3,200 bonus at the end that you can stick in your pocket or put it towards a new truck. If your lease truck has low enough miles you can lease it for multiple yrs and buy it at the end if you want. I had a 2004 379 that was going for $70,000 on the truck lot and I could have bought it for $36,000.
Best Leasing programs?
Discussion in 'Motor Carrier Questions - The Inside Scoop' started by ic40oz, Apr 30, 2008.
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I know u guys are going to beat me up for this, but here is my 2 cent worth. I'm a JB Hunt company driver. I to are looking at leasing because i just dont have the big down payment to spend. JB Hunt has a program that i'm getting ready to enter. It might be worth your while to check it out. Prime was a top choice for me, but I have a family that i liked to see every 2 to 3 weeks. With Jb Hunt you can have a truck payment as low as $275 a week depending on age and miles on the truck that you choose. I would suggest looking on their website for all the details, I just don't want to go to indepth with it and risk getting booted of here as I really value this website. Everyone one has their own opinion and I respect that. It cant be to bad since I enjoy driving for them as a company driver. And yes, their lease trucks run much faster than company trucks.
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why leasing as a company driver can be bad:
1. Same cpm for heavy loads (burn more fuel)
2. Same cpm for all terrains (hills burn way more than flats)
3. Same cpm for geography (NYC)
#and you have no control over load selection -if you get a ###### load it's just gonna eat up your profit.
At a minimum I would look at Schneiders 65/35 split (they act as a broker) where you pick the loads. Fuel prices are just way too high right now to lease and not be able to have some say in your loads. Look at Landstar also. -
They do offer non-forced dispatch.
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Go ahead and refuse a load as a lease operator and see how long you sit waiting for a "better" load.
This is how the company retaliates against drivers wether they be company or lease operator to let them know who is really calling the shots.
Do as your told and you will be kept busy. Start refusing loads and watch your miles get lower and lower until you cannot make your payments let alone pay your bills at home. -
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