My goals entering this industry was to get into flatbed/heavy-haul. I earned my CDL last July and got a few months of good experience with the first company, I then moved over to a 2nd company on a dedicated account to build-up upper body strength. I probably would have stayed with my current company, but because of low CPM and inability to have the driver "necessities" (e.g. inverter, fridge, microwave) I decided it was time to switch over to flatbed.
I have been accepted to Prime's flatbed division and am scheduled to attend Flatbed Boot-camp in a couple weeks. Any tips, tricks and Do's & Dont's advice greatly appreciated. FYI, I am not muscular (aka thin) fella. I currently drive on a dedicated-regional account and unload my own trailer (for one of those dollar outfits) and have learned a great deal on proper lifting techniques.
r/lawdog71
Rolling into the Flatbed side, any tips or tricks?
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Lawdog71, Aug 1, 2017.
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First bit of advice don't go with prime. Or any other mega. Second, thin is better than fat. Drink lots of water.
Friend, stayinback, spyder7723 and 9 others Thank this. -
If you already have driving experience, why go back to an entry level company that trains rookies? That's taking a step back, not forward. Drop Prime. Try companies like Systems Transport or Combined Transport (I would go with Combined over systems...Combined has a better looking football program if you reaaaaaally want to play football.)peterbilt_2005, spyder7723, Hurst and 7 others Thank this. -
Ruthless, cke, Razororange and 1 other person Thank this.
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New people always read these forums, hear all the bad things about companies and decide to buy a truck first. Bad idea, even pulling general freight. Why? Because no one is going to trust their freight with an untrained rookie. So this guy runs into the heavyhaul section trying to spec the biggest baddest truck to pull MegaHaul loads. Even if you just want to pull 200k and buy a truck to pull 200k, that truck will cost between $275-300k. And no one is going to allow a rookie to pull superloads. The companies that pull 400k are NOT going to hire you...they only hire company drivers to pull that much weight. Why is that? Someone gave you the answer in the other thread, but because you know everything, you missed it.
So, while you're paying for a $300k truck note, you're starving to death as you work your way up. It takes YEARS! You could have bought a lighter spec truck (AND PAID FOR IT) and been world's more profitable, and gained experience much faster because your truck isn't too heavy for the loads that you can pull. But instead, you starve to death. Like so many others, you were just in the business long enough to keep freight rates low.
"Why didn't you say this in the other thread, Six?"
What for? Stupid people come in already knowing everything. Or they troll.DrDieselUSA, 1951 ford, peterbilt_2005 and 17 others Thank this. -
1951 ford, EdwinTheGreat218, Lawdog71 and 7 others Thank this.
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"I wanna be a heavy hauler" is a broad statement. You need to figure out what you wanna haul and take steps to that goal. If equipment is what you want go to an equipment rental yard or a crane company. If industrial machinery or large crates go to a rigging company. If houses are you deal go to a house mover. Start as a support truck and watch the seasoned hands and follow their lead.
DrDieselUSA, EdwinTheGreat218, DDlighttruck and 3 others Thank this.
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