Flatbed versus Refer
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by UsualSuspect, Jul 4, 2017.
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FerrissWheel, x1Heavy, Bud A. and 3 others Thank this.
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Agreed, LoLoL~!
ps: OOPS,
pps: not me.. thank Gawd.... LoL. @EZ Money .. ever have THIS problem?!!? LoL..j/kFerrissWheel, x1Heavy, Bud A. and 3 others Thank this. -
My apologies.
The thing is I think a good driver needs to learn to SLEEP when and where possible. In the example I gave earlier it was understood that when the "bone" (the overhead forklift with the extendable forks) put the first 5000 lbs of drill collars on my deck it would be enough to wake me up. At other times I have the customer knock on my door.
Sleep comes in about ninety minute cycles, going through all four phases of sleep. Take advantage of being able to sleep whenever you get sleepy.
Too many times in company terminals or watching YouTube Queens I hear drivers complain they wake up in the morning and wait ALL DAY for a dispatch, then turn it down because it's an overnight run that picks up at 6:00 pm. These are also the driver's complaining about small paychecks.
Take any load, any time, to anywhere.NoBigHurry, FerrissWheel, x1Heavy and 3 others Thank this. -
@crocky ... I agree with the Lep. I usually do, LoL.
I was just thinking maybe, the O/P spelled his name wrong, actually. Maybe he meant for it to say "Krikey" . . ya know, mate? (NO dis, @aussiejosh whatsoever... love y'alls cheesy sayings, truly!)Bud A., FerrissWheel, x1Heavy and 2 others Thank this. -
You kinda get back what you put into it. Some people drag thier feet when it comes to "work" and it takes way longer than it needs to. People unloading will forget about them and go to lunch.
Bring an extra jug of water as a portable shower!FerrissWheel, Bud A., x1Heavy and 3 others Thank this. -
When I get to my shipper, I roll in, scale and swap paperwork all at once; often see guys flailing with their BOL's as I'm in and under the CatWalk. Out right around an hour.
It's all about the hustle YOU are willing to put in, just like you said, @skellr .
Anticipate THEIR next move; be one ahead. Excellent post, imho.FerrissWheel, Bud A., x1Heavy and 2 others Thank this. -
Have a system of how you manage your straps, chains and dunnage. Don't rush yourself making sure the load is secure, but don't fart at the dinner party and be the guy holding up the line.skellr, UsualSuspect, G13Tomcat and 2 others Thank this. -
Sleeper berth is actually on duty time along with driving and on duty not driving. But us old timers can't sleep more than 5-6 hours at a time cause of old regs where you could actually split your time and avoid things like rush hour traffic!!!!!!
x1Heavy, FerrissWheel, Bud A. and 1 other person Thank this. -
x1Heavy, FerrissWheel and Bud A. Thank this.
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4 hours is enough to charge up a little bit in sleep. It's a little bit. If I finished a 2000 mile run without rest I would need between 16 to 21 hours to pay the "Sleep bill"
There is a big price to that kind of work without sleep. There is a section of your mind that does not record to memory what you are doing when you are tired. There are loads Ive delivered but I could not tell you where, when etc. The last one was a ice cream that went into baltimore from roughly NY Mid state over night after spending two days in Boston, that was the last thing I wanted to continue that kind of work without sleep. It got delivered but not very well.
Once i got into the west and settled into the weather patterns of winter where you can hibernate during a storm but getting up every few hours to rock it 50 feet back and forth to maintain a bed as the snow deepens still some work to do.Bud A., Lepton1, FerrissWheel and 1 other person Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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