I found a 2016 Cascadia on the Penske used trucks list that looks alright for a first truck. Does anyone have any experience working with them? I want a solid truck to start my business up with but I don't want to lease or buy new. I figure this would give me a $12-1400/payment and a median insurance bill. Those two costs are my immediate concerns getting started, since operational costs will be accrued as time goes by.
Penske Used Trucks - Go or No Go? Would you buy one?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by TruckerVinny, Aug 11, 2021.
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And only California requires trucks to have Def. So if you don’t plan going into California your better off getting 2000-2007 truck preferable a Detroit S60 engine.
easy and cheap to work on.Rideandrepair, Rob1320 and blairandgretchen Thank this. -
I have to agree. Especially since I’ve been running a 12.7 for 21 yrs now. I’m stuck in my ways. So dependable. So cheap on parts. Turn key operation. Just keeps going. The price of a repair for emission system, equals the cost of an overhaul. I’ve heard $13000 repairs many times. Seems to be the magic number. Must be the cost of throwing every part available at it, to assure its fixed. Add cost of downtime. Disaster waiting to happen. There’s exceptions, always can get Lucky. Why take the chance? Penske has good maintenance. I bought a Trailer from them. Good deal. It’s the Drivetrain on a Truck that determines most of its value. They all have shortcomings. You need to do research on the common problems, of the Drivetrains and the Trucks. They’re each getting more and more unique. Research the Freightliner One Box for example. Major cost to replace. Enough to keep Me from buying a Truck equipped with one. Plenty of parts still available for the old 12.7s Lots of aftermarket competition. Better than the newer Trucks Dealer Only choices. Finding the right Truck has never been harder. Anything newer, without a warranty is risky. I personally don’t believe in warranties. My inframe done by a competent Mechanic is my warranty. Newer Trucks are just much more complicated. Mandated Government EPA standards caused the Manufacturers to start adding more junk. It’s taken 14 yrs to finally get caught up, and work the bugs out. 07-17 basically 10 yrs of problematic engines.
Speed_Drums and LoneRanger Thank this. -
I feel Penske takes good care of our trucks. Our first two end of lease turn ins had barely 300K after 7 years but I would be afraid of the 'unknowns'.
Sure the maintenance records show only one getting a clutch and tons of regular maintenance. unlike the next two years we had little DEF problems with them and they are in decent shape.
THE UNKNOWN:
We are a local north Jersey carrier doing LTL and TL all over the city and Long Island; so what if it took over 2 years to break 100,000 miles, they are still HARD miles with the occasional New Haven or northern Maryland to blow out the dust and back to the same grind day in and day out.
You can't really know the actual unknown service life of a long term Penske turn in.bzinger Thanks this. -
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That 13k was what my truck needed within the first 20 days after I purchased it.
Warranties don’t cover anything. They will look for any excuse to try and not cover it.
Best answer is pick up a Rig requiring an overhaul and get it done. Less then $25k total cost.
Second option is pick up a rig that can handle another 100k miles and overhaul once you have enough saved. Fix the rest while driving. Way better then a 80k pile of junk.Rideandrepair Thanks this.
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