I have a small flatbed trucking company and one of my O/Os told me he's probably going to be selling his rig soon. He wants to get a 26' box truck with a lift gate and just do local LTL stuff in the Seattle area. He asked if he can still lease on to me and have me find him work and I told him I'll find out.
I looked at Truckstop.com and didn't see any loads for straight truck or moving van. I recently had an LTL shipment delivered to my house that was through Roadrunner but a 3rd party company delivered. I asked the guy and he said he has his own authority and all that. He just started this past summer. So I called up Roadrunner and talked to a guy there. He said that they take O/Os and pay by weight plus extra for residential and liftgate. But didn't really give me any pricing details.
So if I were to lease an LTL O/O, what other companies can I look at to contract for? I'd like to get as much info as possible before just telling him yes.
LTL Owner Operator questions.
Discussion in 'LTL and Local Delivery Trucking Forum' started by dlstruck, Jan 20, 2017.
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My brother owns 3 box trucks, i had one for a little while, local ltl os really courier work. "City hotshot" if ya will... pay (at least here) is based on size, and time frame + distance. So a 1 hour hot run from a to b, pays x where in a 8 hour window for the same freight would be much less..
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Does he need a carrier # for what he does? Sounds like a good entry point for O/O.
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There are a few options, you can hire on to a courier place, they will give you use of their mc dot ect.. but they wont want you running private freight with their name. My brother started llc and had a dot assigned to him. He got a set of magnets from the courier company, (if they have a customer that requires a certain company) he has a no poaching clause in his contract that states he will identify himself and his truck as a representative of the courier company when under dispatch from them.
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That's the way I did it, without a DOT. I see courier companies looking all the time, turnover must be pretty good. Has to be a way to keep thing moving. The indy roustabout probably gets better rates than their captive drivers do.
dsltruck, you might look at Amazon Flex. They experiment with temp drivers to find out how long parcel delivery in a given area takes, then using that info to negotiate with "white van" drivers to do those routes more steadily and at a discounted rate. If your driver looks into it he can try signing up for a route with a passenger car so he can see how it works from the inside, he'd have access to other white van drivers. You might even end up with a fleet. -
I don't need hire on to someone else's authority, I have my own for my trucks.
I'll check out flex but I don't know if they'll want a 26ft box truck loaded fully because that would take forever to deliver. It seems like something people with vans or even regular trucks can do.
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