Post Gordon ~ Thoughts, Commentary & Reflections
Discussion in 'Road Stories' started by Victor_V, Jun 2, 2013.
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Twiddle, Twiddle...
"Only if I can keep it," responded the cashier at McDonald's as I handed him my debit. Good response! Said he probably didn't want a hundred, the only bill I've got. Neatly folded under a rubber band since last Saturday night when I sold the WiFi Wireless Dog Fence. Made $50 on the $100 I paid.
Okay, fine.
Had that teensy, teensy rain this morning. By 7:30 passed the flasher at Flatwood Road and began real rain west side of Ellettsville, then down to almost nothing again. Only one load envelope but Wayne reminded me how I need to be sure I've got Saturday, not Sunday's load if there were 2. Apparently Sunday's trailer isn't loaded yet.
Can't get the driver-side trailer door shut until can pull up to a flat spot. Can't. Rental tractor wouldn't start until a while after I'd alerted Terminal Boss and he'd called for Ascher Road Service. Then it hit and I called him fast to cancel. Got under trailer, let truck warm up some, pulled up, verified load. Futzed with trailer door that would not close.
Now Penske rental tractor won't start again.
Ascher's coming out for sure now...
No, this isn't Kansas anymore and, yes, trucking's like this fairly often. -
Rescued a dry (non refrigerated) load in Indy Sunday. While waiting for other driver to show and remove his locks tried to start refer -- no go!.
I let other driver know to pre-trip the refer whenever he hooks a new trailer to save grief later, that way he coulda had it fixed on the way.
I was rescuing the load so no time for me to stop in route from Indy(Sunday) to Reno (tuesday). TK (thermal King) in Salinas is closed till Monday for the holidays, Good thing I was planning on taking the weekend + Monday off.Victor_V Thanks this. -
Victor_V Thanks this.
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Blu, if you want to share your reefer check-out procedure, I could use it on this job. My reefer knowledge consists of: red light bad, green light good. My load today was dry (all have been) but loaded in a reefer. Probably all the dry vans were out. Got a better truck for tomorrow and a dry van.
The Bloomington 'terminal' is more of a yard; the Indy terminal is just that and what you'd expect from this outfit. All paved (so is Bloomington), but Indy's nicer. Fresh slurry seal. Everything looks business-like and well-thought out. Got just a peek at the drive-thru, multi-bay shop and looks scrubbed clean.
There's been a discussion over at Bright One's current thread http://www.thetruckersreport.com/tr...ows-company-driver-independent-thread-20.html about free-footing vs cruise. Posting something in more than one place is frowned upon but I think it makes sense here. I posted msg 195 there:
Last edited: Dec 28, 2014
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Vic a good basic "refer 50" (prerequisite for "refer 100")
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEkhX2zZX14
As he scrolls through the sensors screens he notes the pretrip function. Select that and it does a good check of the unit. Takes some time, So start that and do your regular pretrip. Refer should be done about the time you finish your standard pretrip.
Quick and dirty check on a running/Loaded unit: go to Gauges and look for temperature differential between supply and return. Difference of 10 is good 6 is the low end and should be serviced soon.Victor_V Thanks this. -
One of the most irritating factors I've experience with "trainers" is their reliance on teaching a new driver what goes on inside the cab with little to no focus on what goes on outside or why. Three examples come to mind:
1. Why not train a new driver, including a driver new to the reefer business, how to operate a reefer and why, not just how to turn it on or off and set a temperature? There is much to learn and much to teach. So...Do it!
2. Why not train a new driver how to move the tandems including what happens to the weight and why, not just how? My guess is every trainer thinks that every CDL holder learned the how/why in school; that is not the case, is it? So...Do it!
3. Why not train a new driver, including a driver new to a movable 5th wheel, how to operate it including when and why? Not all trucks have one and not all truckers with one have used it. So teaching someone "new" what happens to which weight when the 5th wheel moves is critical.
I had to learn these skill on my own, after being kicked out of the nest, and had plenty of frustrating experiences trying to get a load within the 12K/34K/34K weight limitations without really understanding the interrelationships between all the parts that moved and how one affected the other. Coming from an industry where training programs must have FAA approval prior to implementation, I know this: There might be high-quality training programs out there that do all those things and more, but in general, our industry-wide training needs to focus on the small points much more than just getting the truck from here to there for 4 weeks or so.Victor_V Thanks this. -
Today's truck is a 2014 Mack Pinnacle series CXU (sleeper cab) with just under 130,000 miles, super singles. 218 miles this morning to KY. 4 hrs 15 minutes drive time. Light load, under 8K.
More later...Last edited: Dec 28, 2014
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And now I return control of the forum to its rightful owner.joseph1135 and Blu_Ogre Thank this.
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