ROI

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Roy2024, Feb 20, 2018.

  1. Roy2024

    Roy2024 Bobtail Member

    9
    0
    Feb 20, 2018
    0
    Guys,
    I am as green as it gets, totally new to your industy. I am looking into the possibility of purchasing a new rig and hopefully a fulltime O/O job.

    I have seen jobs from $130K - $250K adds. Wanted to get your perspectives on the following:
    • New (cash purchase) vs Used
    • Work availability and flexibility
    • Percentage of income home take
    Your insight is appropriate.

    Thanks,
    Roy
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Gunner75

    Gunner75 Road Train Member

    5,701
    9,076
    Mar 17, 2014
    Jackson Center Ohio
    0
    Don't.... just don't


    Not as a newbie with no experience
     
    Brickwall, 207nomad, shogun and 5 others Thank this.
  4. DUNE-T

    DUNE-T Road Train Member

    7,033
    17,107
    May 10, 2015
    Detroit, MI
    0
    Those adds post gross income, not net
     
    Roy2024 Thanks this.
  5. 77fib77

    77fib77 Road Train Member

    11,554
    75,933
    Jul 7, 2010
    St Louis
    0
    ROI? It's a life style.
     
  6. not4hire

    not4hire Road Train Member

    7,142
    26,957
    May 16, 2012
    Calgary
    0
    /thread
     
  7. 77fib77

    77fib77 Road Train Member

    11,554
    75,933
    Jul 7, 2010
    St Louis
    0
    Go work for someone. Get some training. See if you even like the life. It is a life style. If you buy your stuck with 30, 40, 50, 60k ? In a truck. I don't anyone who can eat 50k if they don't like this sort of life.
     
    snowman_w900 and Roy2024 Thank this.
  8. shogun

    shogun Road Train Member

    6,075
    72,161
    Jan 23, 2009
    Doing a regen
    0
    Listen to Gunner75. This is a tough business with a steep learning curve. Do you have the funds to purchase a truck, trailer, the ridiculously high insurance needed for someone with no experience? Can you survive off load boards while you get some experience on your authority? Can you go without pay waiting on the 30 or 60 day billing cycles?

    Do you know that shop labor rates are around $120 per hour? That a tire on a roadside call will cost you $500 or more? When your truck is in the shop for a breakdown for a week or two can you make the payment and afford the revenue loss plus cover the load you are under? Do you know that getting pulled out of a ditch because you didn’t watch your trailer tires drop into a ditch will cost you $500-$1000 in the middle of the night?

    I will never discourage anyone from buying a truck, but get experience and learn the business first. Make contacts, treat your company truck like it’s yours, watching the costs closely for a year and then reconsider. Owner operating is not for the faint at heart, or people with bad business acumen.
     
    Roy2024, Brickwall and 77fib77 Thank this.
  9. Gunner75

    Gunner75 Road Train Member

    5,701
    9,076
    Mar 17, 2014
    Jackson Center Ohio
    0
    Rather than calling it income, more like gross revenue before expenses
     
    Last edited: Feb 21, 2018
  10. Gunner75

    Gunner75 Road Train Member

    5,701
    9,076
    Mar 17, 2014
    Jackson Center Ohio
    0
    @shogun $500? He'll that's cheap! I had a support single let go on i70 west just outside the loop in Indy, #### thing cosy $1600... new tire, rim, roadside call out, labor... that was through loves
     
    shogun Thanks this.
  11. shogun

    shogun Road Train Member

    6,075
    72,161
    Jan 23, 2009
    Doing a regen
    0
    Yeah, if it comes loose from the hub you are going to spend a lot of money to replace the whole assembly. I think those singles are $800 or better. Our company only has a few of them, we run 99% duals. It can happen to anyone, especially in a sealed hub like that with no sight glass .
     
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.