Of course, the boss will want to talk about you stopping to take a leak twice in 14 hours, not the shipper dinking around for 2 hours before they loaded you or the time you spent waiting for dispatch.
Do you shutdown when the 14 hour clock is up no matter what?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by A Bug, Mar 5, 2015.
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There are a million different reasons as to why a driver might be in a time crunch, and they are not always about poor time management. I don't think that I could take any driver very seriously who claims to have never found himself in the same position.
I have met, and know a lot of darn good drivers, and a lot of idiots as well................. But I never met a perfect driver. -
DrtyDiesel Thanks this.
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jdiesel3406, UKJ and Ebola Guy Thank this.
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Who wants to work 14 hours in a day anyway?!?
UKJ Thanks this. -
UKJ Thanks this.
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dedrouteCO, Lepton1, ramblingman and 2 others Thank this.
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I think I'd put a switch on the ignition wire for the elog, claim it screwed up, and run a paper log.
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But ultimately, it's your choice to make. If you want to drive past that 11/14 you're free to. But you have to make a decision: If you get caught, is the risk worth the pay? Or was there a better choice of load to take? Or for company, could someone else have taken it?
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