So say I got my CDL class A from a community college and all of my endorsements and I'm ready to hit the road, for that first year would I be driving with someone? Like shadowing them? I hear that I will be with a trainer for about 1 week or 6 months. Or does this only happen when you're getting your CDL via Trucking Company instead of community college?
1st Year Of Trucking
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by 92A, Dec 27, 2015.
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No. You will go with a trainer for 4 to 8 weeks in most cases. When I did my training, we were home on the weekends because that's how the company operated.
92A Thanks this. -
Hardly any companies exist that will give you the keys without additional training after you obtain your CDL, no matter how you got it.
Provided your trainer is worth anything, you will learn more in training than you did in school.mountaingote and 92A Thank this. -
That is exactly what my first company did when I started out.
I do not recommend it! -
Why don't you recommend it?
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You don't need to be with a trainer very long unless it's some specialty hauling.
TransAm - 11-12 days
Watkins-Shepard - 10 days
Howard Transportation has a terminal in NC and I think the training period is short.
Two weeks is plenty of time unless you want more or in specialty hauling.Last edited: Dec 27, 2015
92A Thanks this. -
IMO Trucking is a profession best learned by easing into everything. For example a Trucking school that is 3 months long is better than one that is 3 weeks long. A training program at your 1st company that is 5 weeks long is better than one that is 2 weeks long, and one that is 2 weeks is better than one that is like mine which was zero. Just remember around 90% of the people who enter the trucking industry wash out. A significant percentage of the ones who do had too many accidents/incidents and became unemployable for trucking companies. Maximizing your time spent under the surpervision and instruction of experienced hands will increase your liklihood of future success and prosperity in this industry. Just my opinion of course.Lepton1, Mudguppy, mountaingote and 3 others Thank this.
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Of course all of that is dependent on the quality of your trainer/training. 6 weeks in a truck with a moron is much worse than 6 days with a very experienced driver who knows *how* to train. The difficulty is in figuring out who is a moron and who is a teacher.
Also bear in mind that people learn at different rates. Some need to do the same thing over and over until it sticks. Other just need it explained once.Lepton1, White_Knuckle_Newbie, Bob Dobalina and 1 other person Thank this. -
I got my CDL much the same way through a State funded program at workforce development.
Problem was the school wasn't accredited and many big carriers were gonna make me travel many states away and do theirs.
Tried smaller places no experience wouldn't even talk to me so I found a roofing job for the summer.
Eventually a Swift recruiter cold called me off an old application and said we can team you with a mentor so I went out to Gary for orientation and spent my first month with a trainer.
The first week he wouldn't go in the sleeper until he felt safe then when he felt comfortable we ran like a team truck.
Basically I did all the backing up and map reading plus I hadda crank the dolly, open doors, fuel and check oil all the dummy work etc.
After about 4 weeks I took a road test and I went solo.Lepton1 Thanks this. -
Sorry Chinatown, usually I agree with you, just not on this one
This I have to agree with
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