Thank you for your service my friend,i was there too in 03 and it sucked.Thank god i never had to go back..
On Training
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Jimmy P, Sep 15, 2010.
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O I hear ya brother. You were in Iraq in a not so good time. I was there back in 08 but I was in the stan from 09-10, thats where I took it. -
I was just thinking of Cabbage and how guys used to fly down that hill and how I just hoped I'd be able to keep out of their way. Actually, I don't know if that was their poor training, poor attitude, or major death wish! Fun thread. Thanks.
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Well i sorta meant like training for the job over sea's.To get a license through your unit yes its easy as hell,and being in Maintenance ive seen some realllllllly bad drivers(Army side).They had no prior experience driving a truck and they send em out in a convoy,loaded with 4700 gallons of diesel.I flipped on out.I have seen a couple of our guys get in a few acidents and its not pretty.You would think the Department of Defense would learn a thing or two and properly train these guys.Its not only there lives at risk but also the general public.We had a guy probably about 10 years ago come flying down off a bridge(Bourne Bridge on Cape Cod) and barrel roll the whole system,there was fuel EVERYWHERE.Thank god no one got hurt. -
Thanks to all of you who served from those of us who, by some stroke of luck didn't have to.
M915A4 Thanks this. -
Sorry for Hi Jacking your thread Jimmy P...lol...when i see another Vet i always gotta say hi and thanks,regardless of where and when.
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In a perfect world trainers would be paid to train, and paid well. But the economics of the industry dictate that trainer trucks are team trucks--team freight is where many carriers (and trainers) make their money. The dollars to hire people to just train--and to pay them well--may not be there. Margins are thin. -
without the total number of truckers on the road and total of troops out there to compare the % of deaths, those numbers dont mean #### in relation to each other.
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OK, 1st the creds. 22 years military (instructor in my field), then trucker.
Personally, I think a perfect training program would be 6-8 weeks, but I'll use 6 as an example program.
Week 1. Solo miles (400-600/day), various weights. Trainee drives up to 4 hrs a day. Trainee does ALL paperwork, inspections with strict supervision. Trainer gets additional $100/week
Week 2-3. More miles (500-750/day). Increase trainee driving burden. Trainer gets additional $80/week.
Week 4 More miles (750-950/day). Increase trainee driving burden. Trainer gets additional $70/week.
etc, etc.
The bonus pay should be in addition to the .01/mile bonus the trainer gets for having a trainee. Weeks 5-6 should be more of a team setting with only a trainer bonus of .02/mile.
Now that's not hard and fast, but that's how I generally think training time should go. That said, my trainer had a daily 600-700 miles run. By week 3, I did the majority 400 + of the driving. He'd take over driving claiming he was bored....
Oh, and if the miles seem low, I'm on the west coast... 55-60 mph limits.
And finally, Thank you to all our Vets. In this house, you are treasured.
Pal
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