"Protect from freezing" dry van experiences.

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by TallJoe, Feb 17, 2019.

  1. TallJoe

    TallJoe Road Train Member

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    Even if it freezes, I'll still consume it after it thaws. Curious, if it is going to be of any less taste.
     
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  3. Cat sdp

    Cat sdp . .

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    Unless it breaks the bottle....lol
     
  4. ZVar

    ZVar Road Train Member

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    Yea, might wanna do a before and after taste test....
    Open the bottle, use a bit to get the before and that way if it does freeze it will be less likely to break and you can compare the after.. :)
     
  5. tucker

    tucker Road Train Member

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    How does idling the truck keep the trailer warm?
     
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  6. TallJoe

    TallJoe Road Train Member

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    It does not. It is stiring up liquid delaying it from freezing.
     
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  7. tucker

    tucker Road Train Member

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    One bottle outside all by itself doesn’t stand a chance.

    Think of the thermal mass inside your enclosed trailer that tens of thousands of bottles can create!
    SOLIDARITY!!!!


    Where’s @x1Heavy ?
     
  8. supersnackbar

    supersnackbar Road Train Member

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    When I was at Silver Eagle/Arnold, the Albany, GA terminal would pay a local driver to use the 2 yard mule trucks to keep the Miller beer loads from freezing. Back 1 truck under a trailer, lift a little, let it idle 5 min while he'd hook the 2nd truck to the next trailer, idle for 5 min, then repeat it...all night long.

    When I was at Poly, I hauled a load of various water, fruit juice and Gatorade from Indy to the twin cities area...I picked it up on Friday, delivered it Monday, so I got a 34. The broker said, let it idle, you'll be fine...and it was. The temps never got out of the single digits for highs and were below 0° at night and there wasn't even any hint of ice in the bottles when it was unloaded.
     
  9. SoCalRed

    SoCalRed Medium Load Member

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    In LTL we deal with this every day. If "protect from freezing" is not on the BOL not our problem. If on the BOL I call dispatch and they decide to pick it up or not. Usually if temps will be below 20 we don't pick it up.
     
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  10. Midwest Trucker

    Midwest Trucker Road Train Member

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    Ive had water over night down to like 15 degrees and idled all night. It was nerve wracking and I don’t do it anymore. Just not worth it. The collective heat does make it fine for quite awhile but I don’t know about 3 days.

    I’m sure you’ll be ok but as you said maybe refuse it next time or ask about it before accepting the load. If you get there and it’s freeze protect leave and demand a TONU.

    Good luck man.
     
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  11. TallJoe

    TallJoe Road Train Member

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    Once they loaded the truck, it would have taken quite a resolve to refuse it. I mean, you get there, wait till get loaded, finally see what that actually is and then based on Weather Channel forecast, you decide to bail on it.
     
    Coffey, Badmon, PE_T and 1 other person Thank this.
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