I know you don't think those numbers are very good. But for a refer company driver, those are great numbers. 4 months, projected to 12 months, that is 135,000 miles for the year, with 48 days off...
Going to be almost impossible in the general freight market to find a company job that runs you any harder.
And don't forget about the 1 cent bonuses for every mile you ran in the last quarter... That is a rare.
Heyl Journey with xlsdraw
Discussion in 'Motor Carrier Questions - The Inside Scoop' started by xlsdraw, Feb 4, 2014.
Page 56 of 68
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48Packard, Dinomite, paul_4lp and 1 other person Thank this.
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Longer runs equate for more miles as well. Less loading/unloading/dropping/hooking etc. My four years at Schneider, I never topped 110k. Constant NE....very few runs over 1k.....If I were running consistent longer hauls, I might not be satisfied with 120k. That is something I really didn't consider in my previous comment.
But I have coffee right now....and I'm on vacation....my brain already seems to be defogging a little.....xlsdraw Thanks this. -
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Your two posts ^^^^ clearly state what I believe as well. Longer runs should equate to more miles. Yet, I averaged a little more with Crete than I have so far with Heyl. This is where the confusion lies. Twice the average load length is not equating to more miles due to frequently being assigned live offload appointments that have 18-48 more hours on them than is needed. This is how the advantage of longer loads gets mitigated down. Less overall work yes. Regardless of how my posts appear, they are more analysis than complaint. Most should recognize that my objective is to utilize my time away from home as efficiently and productively as possible.
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If you did not have to wait for appointment times, then yes longer length of haul would equate to more miles... but in todays JIT, where you deliver, and the warehouse loads it onto the delivery trucks over the next 24 hours, we just don't have the option of delivering early, and the company does not want to loose the customer due to late deliveries, so they schedule extra time, as a safety net. And in refer, this happens very often.
And since many of the company drivers are not willing to run as hard as you, the company has to protect themselves, and schedule accordingly, which will frustrate a hard runner, like you.48Packard, Dinomite, Pintlehook and 1 other person Thank this. -
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xlsdraw Thanks this.
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I personally had a great week with Heyl, i started last Monday afternoon FL-MD= 950mi nd MD-WA= 2750mi dont deliver til wed at 13:00 so im 106 miles from destination with only 2:50hrs left out of my 70 taking a 34hr. After my delivery im pretty sure ill be getting routed back to FL
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xlsdraw Thanks this.
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