I'm not worried about my starter. Not worried about my engine, either. When it needs an in-frame, I'll rebuild it. And I dang sure won't be spending $18,000 to do it.
If I want to idle to be comfortable and get good sleep, I'm gonna do it.
With that being said, if I was to lose a starter, or have batteries go bad overnight while sitting here on location, and the truck didn't start in the morning, I'd be in everyone's way and basically have a multi-million dollar frac job on hold while I wait for parts or a wrecker.
That's not on my list of stuff to do.
Why do people needlessly idle ?
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by bzinger, Mar 19, 2016.
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Some drivers do find the vibration and sound to be soothing, that's great for them, I'm sure it's a lot easier for these drivers to get the sleep they require. Some drivers, older probably, still believe there's less wear and tear on the engine if they idle and keep a constant engine temperature, since more wear on the engine occurs at cold startup. Today that may be old news, but I still run around 55 for 20 or 30 minutes while my engine gets nice and warmed through. Of course, I am old.
I think idling consumes more fuel for whatever reason, and since I'm a conservation minded American, I try not to idle. I do, though, of course, hot or cold extremes.
I used to idle to charge my batteries like some members mention. However, I got away from the 1,000 CCA batteries, bought a nice set of dual purpose batteries, and they'll run my refrigerator, charge my devices, turn my cabin lights on, for at least 16 hours and still crank my D60 14L right up in the morning. A little slow below 32 degrees, though, but still plenty of pop.
One other thing. All batteries are not created equal. I bought a set from Fleet Pride 2 years ago, they had a great price point, $69/each. I thought it was a good thing. But they didn't last. About a year and a half in, they began getting shorter and shorter charge intervals. I'd be waking up in the night when my bunk heater was running to charge them, or idling for a while before hitting the bunk in the hope I'd sleep a few hours straight. There's a couple of great American manufacturers, Deka for one (a number of different labels, you can check on this) is very very good, and Johnson Controls also makes a quality product. In my outfit, 725 CCA batteries from Deka or Johnson Controls (I run one in my Silverado, RedTop AGM) and my battery issues went away.bzinger Thanks this. -
Seems there is a common theme here
"I am not allowed to idle so you shouldn't either"
Fuel is cheap now and my comfort physical or mental is priceless....
And I'll hug trees with the best of them.Last edited: Mar 20, 2016
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Just spent 4 days traveling the back roads in Idaho and was amazed at all the little towns that restricted jakes at the top of the hill coming into town. I can see restricting the use of them when they have no muffler but not when they do. Here they only restrict the use if there are no mufflers on them. But hey that is Idaho they can do what they want but it is much safer when you are 130k, come around a corner at 55 only to hit that sign at the very top of the hill and a 35 mph limit at the bottom to allow the use of the muffled jakes.
It's stupid but it is what it is, you deal with it. Just like idling trucks, you deal with it. I like the sound of straight pipes but I cannot stand them being on my truck. I don't worry about my batteries as I don't have anything but a 100 watt inverter to run the printer.
As for falling asleep at a red light, I probably could as I could also fall asleep in an artillery barrage but I don't. You could be someone that stays up playing video games on your 10 and you are the one that falls asleep at the red light. Luckily I don't have to deal with truck stops and whiney drivers other than to get fuel.
You leave me alone and I leave you alone unless you are a hazard on the road. An idling or shutdown truck is not a hazard. -
Lots of people worrying about nickels when they could be picking up dollars.
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No cell service but then again the small town where the road starts doesn't even have it there or anywhere around for miles (which makes your point).
And I don't know if a logging road doubling as a main road to this hydro dam is anywhere near qualified to be called 'bush'.
For the record, I drive for a company with a zero idle policy. I have no problem with that, or other trucks idling. As others have said, it's even better if one is idling near me because of the ambient noise it creates. Unless their air drying is constantly going off I wouldn't think most people would have an issue but maybe I am wrong about that.Last edited: Mar 20, 2016
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