Hooking-up in cold weather is a lot tougher. You had a lot of things working against you. I know when it is really cold my fifth wheel does not latch as well as it does in warm weather. It makes more of a thud sound instead of a nice clear latching sound. If my handle does not go ALL the way in I pull handle back out and try again. In my opinion your mistake was letting the trailer fall off the fifth wheel. If you had re-done things before the trailer fell down on the truck frame you could have saved the situation. Accidents happen. I am sure that if freight was better you would still be trucking. It is a shame Schneider is looking for any minor incident to get rid of drivers. Good-luck to you.
Schnieder National ..... What BS!
Discussion in 'Report A BAD Trucking Company Here' started by Wiscentral, Feb 20, 2009.
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I don't know about Schneider but our carrier requires us to look at the jaws and be sure they are fully locked .
vickw Thanks this. -
Rick, SNI requires to check to make to make sure the jaws are locked open when you get out are check you alignment before hooking up. Then, after a tug test is good, get out of the cab and check the space between 5th wheel and apron along with the 5th wheel release handle is slid back in. Next, crawl under the trailor and check the locking jaws are slid accross the kingpin. This is all true. Only after a successful tug test.
I think what they mean by natural turnover is drivers retire, or getting better offers or maybe medically unable to drive. This happens with all companies. Its a gimmie. Un-natural would be the screw ups, accidents, deaths, terminations and in one case, A driver I know was arrested at a DOT inspection stop in TN, outstanding warrants for drug possesion.
AMPM Wayne, As of right now, learning and Knowing from the experience of it, I do agree with you 100%, but take it one step further. Knowing the struggle to get under it. I would get out, with trailor raised, but not hooked up and with tension off, drop the landing gear to raise the trailor up. Why struggle to get back under it. This would also would help prevent the mess. They don't have to time teach you everything to cover all situations. Just the basics and how to prevent a high hook up. But not a low hook up. The rest is learned by hard knocks experience. -
There are a couple post here that I would say are boarder line
Please keep your comments polite
Its a ruff market out there for all drivers, lets let the Truckers Report be a haven from all that trouble
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O.K. dumb question here . Did you dump the air out of the airbags on the tractor or does Schneider not have air ride ?
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Not a dumb question. Can't touch them, so it was not an option available to me
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Can't touch them ? You mean you drop loaded trailers without dumping them ??
http://books.google.com/books?id=bf...=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA59,M1 .
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That would be a correct. Park it, release brakes, drop landing gear down to where they just start touching the ground, Pull your airlines and electrical cord. and release 5th wheel. Now get in cab, release tractor brakes only and pull forward a bit, but not all the way, watching your trailor pull free and settle evenly. When all is good ....move on.
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And the airbags ? I've been told keeping the airbags inflated when pulling from a loaded trailer is harmful for the bags . In cases of a trailer dropped low as mentioned in this thread deflating the bags until half the fifth wheel is under the trailer then inflating them is easier on you and the equipment .
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I can not argue with that. I will bet by all logical thinking it is true. But It was not part of the procedures taught to Schneider drivers. Maybe they feel differant and some drivers would forget to re-inflate them, I dunno.
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