Another Physical Demand Thread about Flatbedding. Specifically Height...

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by SilverBulletBand, Jan 27, 2019.

  1. shogun

    shogun Road Train Member

    6,075
    72,163
    Jan 23, 2009
    Doing a regen
    0
    I’m friends with people who have been up to 13 feet on loads. Brokered loads even. I’m jealous of people in $500 cars, just FYI. If anyone has a problem with that, I point them to the Smokies.
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Bean Jr.

    Bean Jr. Road Train Member

    5,573
    9,929
    Mar 30, 2014
    0
    Take what he says with a grain of salt.

    Many flatbed loads are low. I have a covered wagon, which has 4' high sides and the center is about 7' tall. Steel loads are only a couple feet off the deck. Depending where you run, you may never see a lumber or insulation load.
     
  4. x1Heavy

    x1Heavy Road Train Member

    34,016
    42,144
    Mar 5, 2016
    White County, Arkansas
    0
    I used a covered wagon, you are walking about with the tarp at head level above the deck more or less a foot or two in the center for really BIG coils.

    I cannot remember ever getting up on a coil. That's one thing you don't do. If you slid off in one direction towards a rough cut sharp sheet edge....
     
    Tombstone69 and SilverBulletBand Thank this.
  5. spyder7723

    spyder7723 Road Train Member

    15,471
    25,078
    Mar 31, 2013
    sarasota, fl
    0
    Thats an actual osha reg. You can not be 4 feet or higher off the ground without a form of fall protection. However it specifically excludes truck drivers from this, but most safety folks at plants or job sites dont realize there is a truck driver exclusion.
     
    SilverBulletBand Thanks this.
  6. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

    77,805
    184,783
    Aug 28, 2011
    Henderson, NV & Orient
    0
    I was born & raised in Robertson County. Went to 10 day cdl school in Murfreesboro many years ago. TDI is the name of the school and I think they've lengthened the course and moved the school a little further south to Chistiaa
    Do you want to run the roads or stay close to home?
    Estes Express Lines in Smyrna may have a driver trainee program for new drivers.
    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2019
    SilverBulletBand Thanks this.
  7. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

    77,805
    184,783
    Aug 28, 2011
    Henderson, NV & Orient
    0
    One of my first jobs was hauling Pro-Craft boats out of the factory in Murfreesboro. I think there's a boat hauler near you around Murfreesboro. I can't remember the name of the outfit now. The Pro-Craft drivers went there when the Pro-Craft merged or closed or whatever happened to it.
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2019
    Tombstone69 and SilverBulletBand Thank this.
  8. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

    77,805
    184,783
    Aug 28, 2011
    Henderson, NV & Orient
    0
    Here's 3 flatbed companies to consider:
    Melton Truck Lines - coast to coast
    McElroy - home weekends
    Transport National - Winchester, TN hires new cdl grads. Drivers say they average $1500+ weekly.
     
    SilverBulletBand Thanks this.
  9. PoleCrusher

    PoleCrusher Road Train Member

    7,503
    82,194
    Aug 26, 2014
    LLMF
    0
    Thank you for your service, on both counts.

    To your question, if you really want to do open deck work, look for a company that hauls freight you will be comfortable with. Hauling steel could be a good way to go, depending on where you live. Coils, beams, tubing, stuff that will not require getting on top of a high load to tarp.

    There's plenty of flatbed freight you can haul without having to worry about getting up on top of the load. You just have to find the right fit for you.
     
    cke, SilverBulletBand and Bean Jr. Thank this.
  10. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

    77,805
    184,783
    Aug 28, 2011
    Henderson, NV & Orient
    0
    R. E. West in Lebanon has flatbed division and dry van division. This company hires new cdl grads. Don't know what the flatbed division hauls, but dry van hauls hot water heaters out of A.O. Smith in Ashland City and runs all over the country.

    Freymiller is refrigerated and hires new cdl grads. www.drive4freymiller.com and click on "Recent Graduates."
     
    SuperRookie and SilverBulletBand Thank this.
  11. HillbillyDeluxeTruck

    HillbillyDeluxeTruck Road Train Member

    5,957
    30,493
    Mar 3, 2013
    San Antone
    0
    Fwiw I got 46k of sheetrock on my flatbed right now. Thats 19 bundles of 1/2".

    Its 4ft off the deck. So go stand on something about 7 1/2ft off the ground and that's where you'll be IF you have to get up on top for whatever reason.

    We haul for USG and they tarp and strap the loads. But I set my own edge protectors at some of the facilities because they are lazy ##### and will lose those and bungees.Only reason Im on top of the load and there are ways to put edge protectors on from the ground.
     
    SilverBulletBand Thanks this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.