Interested in opinions on how to get from cdl school student to o/o
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Warrior's Lance, Jan 26, 2014.
Page 2 of 4
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
I would wonder if this kind of work would look like verifiable experience to mercer or landstar?
I'll also have to investigate the threads and gov't websites about authority and such, and see how that effects things that would be available to me, or restricted from me.
After this weather breaks, I'll ask a neighbor that appears to be under his own authority about what he is doing and how to repeat it. They have a covered wagon and a flatbed and two ancient tractors which both run all the time and they come home almost every night.
Thanks for the idea
Lance -
Thanks for the wishes and the warning.
Lance -
Study the "CDL Practice Tests" at the top of this page.
knuckledragger Thanks this. -
I meant you could do all that grain hauler work after you got your CDL. It'd keep you close to the farm and you could be off for planting and harvest.
knuckledragger and Warrior's Lance Thank this. -
I have to wonder what the difference would be in insurance rates between getting a cdl on your own vs a cdl school. I might learn a lot more, on my own and with some helpful neighbors, but don't insurance companies only think inside their little box of normalcy and then penalize those that do things outside that box? The difference could pay for the school, don't ya think?
Lance -
-
-
I talked to progressive today, the quote was for a o/o, under own auth. Based in Minnesota. No driving experience is required. There was no mileage restrictions, lower 48 plus part of Canada. Some state laws are different.
Chinatown and knuckledragger Thank this. -
I bet some of the better companies would gladly hire you under your time off requirements. You basically need a total of a month and a half off for farming. If anything, i bet you'd have a leg up on the average Joe. Farming takes real hard work, so obviously you have a solid work ethic. It also requires being around equipment, driving a truck is a heck of a lot more like running a tractor than driving a car.
I'd pick up the phone and start making some calls. Somebody will hire you
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 2 of 4