Cement Mixer Drivers?
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by HouseOfPain, Mar 10, 2011.
Page 9 of 9
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
You can take the curb forever I will fill every post hole from here to Texas....
-
I did it here in OK fro awhile until the MGR lied to me and then I told him where to put. his comment was he could get OTR drivers all day for nothing so I told him to go hire them I don't work for crooks or liars.
-
Yup, slump readings differ based on different factors, but if you use a baseline from 4" up, the best way is remembering when your stuff is tested on-site-make a note of the results and where the meter was reading-also, if anyone else has driven your truck, their advice is very valuable. Basically, 1200 is a tight 4" slump. You take it from there, but i found it important to be conservative when adding h2o-"once it's in-it's impossible to get out" really, the main ingredient to getting good at mixing to slump is experience, and by drawing on the knowledge of more experienced drivers. It's a job that is demanding, but i always remember this-no matter how much mix a customer has poured, there's no such thing as a "human slump meter." trust your gut and your equipment. If the meter tells you it's a 5" slump, it's a 5" slump. Case closed. Good luck and may god go with you as you deliver the "gray gold."
-
The pay in Chicago land area in my local is 33.48 per hr
-
I know its an old topic, but im new to the forums. Been driving a mixer for a few years here in detroit. I thouht we were getting good pay at 23.60, its nice to see the scale in chicago over $30.
chopper103in Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 9 of 9