Yeah, another FSC thread.
So I was talking this week with the terminal manager and he asked me if I wanted to take a load into the Northeast. Given the cost of fuel in that area I told him it wouldn't be my first choice. We got into a discussion about the rate for ICs and how it should be higher given the current rate of inflation, including increasing fuel cost. LOL, he didn't agree with my assessment.
He tried to reason that FSC is a sliding scale based on fuel cost, which I know. Apparently, terminal management just did the math two weeks ago and they determined that the average fuel cost for ICs was $1.51/Gal.
I always thought FSC was intended to average fuel cost across geographical regions. It DOES NOT account for rapid increases in the cost of fuel due to inflation or crazy government policy.
Am I incorrect?
Fuel Surcharge
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by spindrift, Feb 19, 2022.
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I need a better fuel card
I’m not getting fuel for anywhere near that $$ -
Fuels not that bad up here, PA is the most on the way in but that’s just because they are $0.74 gal/ifta, there just isn’t a flat piece of land up here so it burns quick
Mcast3092, Brettj3876, ibcalm19 and 1 other person Thank this. -
So you're saying that fuel prices can rise at any rate and a FSC will always offset those rising costs?flood Thanks this.
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Nobody is. I thought that is THE POINT of the FSC. Ideally, actual fuel cost - FSC = $1.25
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The FSC doesn't change minute by minute, but FSC is a slow and clumsy tool meant to normalize the cost of fuel to the $1.25 "neighborhood".
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FSC is based on 3 things
#1 national AVERAGE pump price of fuel
#2 base price of $1.25 a gl fuel
#3 average 6 mpg
It is adjusted every week (monday)
The math for doing fsc is simple
Take avg. price - $1.25 then ÷ by 6 then round down to the next hole cent..
Right now it would look like this
$4.019 - $1.25 = $2.769
$2.769 ÷ 6 = .4615
.4615 round down to .46cpm fsc...
If your trucks avg mpg is 7mpg and the pump price is $4.019 your fuel cost is ($4.019 ÷ 7) = .57cpm - (fsc) .46 = .11cpm....
For every .06 fuel goes up your fsc goes up .01cpm
Do you pay PUMP PRICE or do you get a discount on fuel.....??
Rideandrepair, GYPSY65 and spindrift Thank this. -
I get a discount off advertised as long as I fill at Love's, the J or Pilot.
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I think one of the points I'm trying to make is that if you always have to go to areas where fuel prices are higher than the national average, you don't benefit as much from the FSC.
Then there's the actual pre-tax cost of fuel which is a different matter.flood Thanks this.
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