Picking my own freight baby! My journey to & of being on Schneider choice, the Adventure & Numbers!

Discussion in 'Schneider' started by freightwipper, Jun 1, 2015.

  1. ChicagoJohn

    ChicagoJohn Road Train Member

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    I'm assuming you bought a 70" condo then? The 72" mid-roofs have a dump in them for the tanker setup.
     
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  3. ChicagoJohn

    ChicagoJohn Road Train Member

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    @sadwar what kind of mpg's are you getting and how do you run? Any idea what kind of rpm your turning at 65 or 70's?
     
  4. sadwar

    sadwar Road Train Member

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    I still have my 2016 FL Cascadia with the AMT DT12 transmission. I get around 8mpg average usually around 1400 or so rpm driving the speed limit usually....

    Roll on...
     
  5. ChicagoJohn

    ChicagoJohn Road Train Member

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    @sadwar sorry wrong guy, lol.

    @TheDudeAbides
     
  6. TheDudeAbides

    TheDudeAbides Medium Load Member

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    I got a 12' Columbia, 12.7L, 58" midroof.
     
  7. milehunter43

    milehunter43 Heavy Load Member

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    Is that the stupid poster they have hanging in Obetz?

    How DARE you want to work less than 6 days a week!!!
     
  8. RootHog

    RootHog Heavy Load Member

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    Unless you don't allow yourself to be tracked.
     
  9. RootHog

    RootHog Heavy Load Member

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    Very well said. I got a 2012 Cascadia (used) when I started the choice program. Drover it for a year, did not have one problem with it. With the money I was putting back after paying myself, I could have had it payed off at the end of the 2nd year, giving me a totally paid off truck that was only 3 years old, and less than 500k miles.

    I felt I needed a new t680 though, so got it, and spent 1/4 of the the first year with it in the shop. Gave it back to Schneider, and went out yet again to buy a new truck, only this time it was a glider.

    If I had it all to do over again, as much as I love this t660 glider I am driving, I would have kept the stripped down Cascadia, and it would have been payed for right now.

    That adds up to a lot of wasted money on trucks that I didn't keep, and it was a foolish mistake to let that Cascadia go, especially after somebody else made a year's worth of payments on it before me.

    1 truck, bought new, should easily last a person 15 years, factoring in one inframe. That same truck should take you no more than 4 years to pay for, giving your more than 10 years of running high profit with the truck, and plenty of time to put back for your next truck if you feel the need for a new one at that point.
     
  10. sealevel

    sealevel Road Train Member

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    If I was one of the guys with no house payments, family or any of that stuff I would have a custom glider built so fast it would make your head spin. Pay it off in 5 years and you still would have 15 years of reliable service. It's not unreasonable to expect 2 million out of a truck you payed 150 grand for. It's amazing how good a 600 mile load looks at 1.50 when you have no payments and your truck isn't in the shop every 6 weeks. If light duty car and trucks were in the shop all the time due to government mandated emissions problems the general public would be outraged.
     
    redoctober83 Thanks this.
  11. freightwipper

    freightwipper Road Train Member

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    IC driver A vs B

    IC driver A averages 2800 miles a week at $1.70, overhead is $1100 a week..
    Works 3 weeks and take a week off.

    IC driver B averages 2800 miles a week at $1.70, overhead is $1,100 a week..
    Works 2 weeks and takes 2 weeks off BUT has a part time driver working those two weeks being paid .50 a mile.. truck is doing the same work.

    Which driver comes out more ahead?

    IC A:
    2800 miles X $1.70 = $4,760
    7.5 mpg X $2.30 a gallon = $859
    - $1,100 = $2801 per week

    $2801 X 3 weeks = $8,403 - $1100 (week off) = $7,303

    IC B:
    2,800 miles X $1.70 = $4,760
    7.5 mpg X $2.30 a gallon = $859
    - $1,100 = $2801 per week

    $2,801 X 4 weeks = $11,204
    - Company driver pay 2800 miles per week X .50 a mile X 2 weeks = $2,800 in part time driver pay + $200 in employees taxes = $3,000 in costs.

    $11,204 - $3,000 = $8,204 vs IC A: $7,303

    IC driver B earns more money overall while getting double the time off away from the truck!

    Something to think about..
    Also shows truly how much a sitting new truck costs you with the big ol flease payments.

    Before I get jumped on these were general numbers to get an idea of comparing an operation of a lease truck that sits sometimes vs hiring a driver to keep the truck working.
     
    Last edited: Jul 19, 2016
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