Let me get this straight you've got 75 no make that 60 feet or 20 yards and you still can't reverse the truck in?
CR England: No blindside, cant pickup load
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Truckdrivingtrailerpuller, Jul 14, 2018.
Page 10 of 12
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Instead, use your communication skills. Someone there speaks English so find them. Find another driver and ask them for assistance. Cross the door number off on the paper, write no, and hand it back to them. Exhaust your options. When all else fails, you start calling phone numbers of bosses until someone answers. One of the worst things you could do in my opinion is blow it off like you did for so long. Now your boss is getting involved 15 hours after the fact.
And England isn't as dumb as people want to believe. They know you drivers will have to blindside and a policy like this is just further insulation when someone screws up. Then they can say "well, we told him not to, it's right here in the rules." Instead of drivers refusing to blindside until England is forced to changed the rule, the company is in the position of having it's cake and eating it too.Last edited: Jul 16, 2018
-
"Three."
"Let me in on the action, I'll put twenty on the under!"
I had a nice steak dinner. I was betting on me. -
I'm in agreement that the policy of no blindside backing is wrong. At Swift a trainee is required to accomplish several blindside backs before I could sign off on their qualification to upgrade to solo.
If you aren't improving as a driver every day, then you aren't advancing your career. You SHOULD be challenging yourself. GOAL often, especially when learning a new skill like blindside. Set your globe mirrors so you can barely see your own truck as a point of reference (I can't believe how many trucks I get into and the globe mirrors seem to be aimed to admire your truck instead of giving you a proper wide angle view).
Often when I blindside a GOAL can be as simple as rolling down the passenger window, setting the parking brake, and leaning out the window to see your clearance on the near side. To see the far side you do have to exit the truck to have a look.
When you get to the point that you look forward to hard backs as a challenge is right about the time you realize, "I got this!" Don't get over confident. Keep working at it.
Years into this I am still making breakthroughs on backing, shifting, and decision making. I review my day at the end of every shift. Where can I improve? I have weekly specials. This week it's only double clutching and NO Jakes. Last week it was only floating with full Jakes.
Always improve. Prepare yourself to be ready when opportunity knocks. It does yourself no good to lollygag along with your career, doing the same old same old, if you haven't improved your skill set.
What if tomorrow you were offered a dream job, driving a twin stick? Or an 18 speed pulling a smooth bore tanker? Have you become butter smooth with your shifting? What if the job requires numerous blind sides on a tight schedule? Up to the challenge?
Always be a better driver today than you were yesterday. -
-
The following is something I could not deal with.
-
One time at a previous job, I got tired stupid or day shift not doing their work leaving it for me. I started pushing back and I was fired. [This was not a trucking job]
While looking for other jobs, I dealt with absurd personality assessment questionnaires. Basically, many companies wanted drones and not independent thinkers. I did get such a job for a while before trucking by playing dumb.
Stuff like this might a sign such management of HR policies are spreading or people with a history of such jobs think they must simply shut up and do as they're told. -
-
-
This was a fun one I did a while back. You’ll get used to it. I’m new and figuring it out too, don’t stress and if you have to go so super slow.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 10 of 12