A few days shy of a month, I had not driven a tractor trailer in 20 years though.Training is dependent on the individual, there is no set time or mileage.
Fresh Meat Looking For A Starter
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Ray Strack, Oct 13, 2017.
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I know you are not looking to spend 2 years living in a truck with a stranger, but quite honestly, that is how you will learn out here.Ray Strack Thanks this. -
Thanks Redtwin, I want long quality training but when I saw their time line of 3-12 months I was like woah! 8 weeks would be cool or atleast be on their $700 salary when doing extended training. -
It's a career and an adventure.... Personally, I would do something else.
Ray Strack Thanks this. -
Check out Carter Express, they hire recent cdl grads. Trucks run about 68 I think, they have a cross dock in Romulus Michigan so you might could get a dedicated run there. You would probably be on an automotive freight run which is good miles year round and gets you home often.
I work for a different company that does automotive as it's main freight, and Carter runs down here to Nissan in Mississippi daily. They seem to have low turnover from what I see, that's about all I know. Hope it helps.Ray Strack Thanks this. -
Currently my game plan is get my year, probably a little more than come back home to do local LTL p&d. The benefits are good, pay is solid, and i have 7 years working largely with that setup. I was going to do a dock to driver program with a good company but it was a slow progression. 6 months part time dock, then class b for a year, than 120 hour mentor into class a startung at 21 and in 2 years cap at $26.
But who knows, maybe ill get hooked to the road. Other options might be a solid restaurant, im a #### good cook, just wanna perfect smoking meats, etc... -
A big portion of training is "conditioning" the trainee to knock out the miles. Loads are dispatched at 60mph and our trucks run 72mph so they expect drivers to run in excess of 600 miles a day. I have had 1400 mile loads that had to be done in 2 days. They want to make sure they aren't putting guys in trucks that are looking to hit the sleeper after 400 miles. Sure there are some lazy loads, but when they need you to, they want to know they can count on you to knock out 700+ in a day.
I'm not sure why you feel you will need or want 8 weeks training. There really isn't all that much you can learn in training. Once you know which QC messages to send and when, how to fuel the truck,and a few basic company rules, all you need is the ability to drop an address in the GPS and keep the truck on the road until you get there. -
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I actually did really good in school so I feel confident. Backing is the focus point of what I want in training or using a manual trans. The finishing school from averitt is what turned me onto them like the 180 backing and any other crazy situations. Other wise I earned low points on my road test, and I'm proud of em. -
The website is wrong, I'm sure of it. They wouldnt have someone in training that long. If the trainee still needed training after a couple months they would just cut them loose as it meant the trainee wasn't working out.
I will be perfectly honest with you. If you are expecting or would just like plenty of backing practice or instruction you won't get that at Abilene. That's not to say individual trainers won't let you get some practice in a quiet lot if there is time, just it would be best if you didn't expect it as very often there won't be that much time to spare.Ray Strack Thanks this.
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