well, it's gonna become harder and harder for schneider to get good drivers, cause the ones who do their research will go with the companies that pay practical miles!!I know I was considering schneider, but after seeing how many companies pay a higher rate AND practical miles I have now dropped them off my list.
![]()
schneider question
Discussion in 'Schneider' started by jtaran06, Dec 23, 2007.
Page 3 of 9
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
-
ZIGGY........... are you a pumpkin??
-
lol well I AM pumpkin shaped...sort of round in the middle.
-
As far as pay, in the Midwest region you start at .30 cents per mile, .35 at 6 months, and .40 with a year experience, but then you don't get another raise until 3 years. .40 cents per mile for a year experience is pretty good, even if it is short miles. -
I drive for Schneider. My question concerns inverters. I bought one of the 12 volt coffee pots(5 cup). It took it two hours to make. I tried it with the truck idling and turned off--two hours both times. My question is: was it the brand or is that normal? A regular four-cup Mr Coffee uses 600 watts. If you can get an inverter that size that plugs in would I be better off going that route? I do love my coffee and am getting tired of having to go in a TS every morning.
Would appreciate any advice.
-
Really: By giving you that 10%, it allows them to obsolve themselves of blame if you end up in a bad area while following street level directions. It also allows you to plot your own trip, which can often times be much quicker, despite logging more miles.
Pay: I want to know who hlaird talked to, or deals with, because my pay isn't 40cpm.. My pay is 34cpm + accessorials and region premium.
Official: You are allowed an invertor up to and not to exceed 180 watts. That invertor must be powered using a cigarette lighter plug only, no hard-wiring it to the battery or fuse box. Wiring it via the CB power studs is a violation as well.
Real: Follow the hard-wire rule, if you don't you WILL be fired. As long as it plugs into a 12v lighter socket, feel free to use it. If it is more powerfull than 180 watts.. Make sure it's not in the truck when it goes in the shop. You wouldn't get fired for it, but they will "confiscate" it.
Also keep in mind that the more powerfull the invertor, the faster the batteries drain out. Some of these trucks have some pretty old batteries in them, and running an invertor over 180w can drain the batteries too far for the truck to start after 10 hours, or even 3.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
The driver who keeps blowing fuses: Get that electrical system checked out... NOW! lol. Seriously though, it should be fixed. That could be a sign of a much larger problem. Electrical problems = bad mojo. Trucks can start on fire from electrical irregularity in the system. Please have it looked at, for your own safety. -
Fridges: If you can find a 12v plug fridge you can have it. But we settle for 12v coolers (similar to fridges, but not.) They keep the tempurature inside the cooler about 30 degrees cooler than it is outside the cooler. So things can still go bad in them, if it's 120 in your truck, it can be 90 in the cooler.
Ovens/Stoves: Not allowed, in any form, 12v or otherwise (some people use them anyway)
GPS: Allowed
TV: Allowed. Obviously don't watch while driving.
Laptop: While allowed, they are not to be turned on and used while driving.
You can bring anything else you wish, as long as it doesn't cause what they consider a distraction to driving, or violate their No-Drill policy. If you don't have to drill a hole, cut a wire, bend, break, or damage any truck part to use that personal item, it's allowed unless specifically prohibited in the driver's handbook. You will be given a handbook at orientation or training (whichever you have to do).
About idleing: I drive during the most uncomfotable times, so my idle percentage can stay down. Drive at night during the winter, and drive during the day in the summer. It doesn't eliminate the temperature discomfort, but it helps a lot. -
Having worked both ways I would highly reccomend thr practical mile pay setup.I drove for Roehl at the practical mile pay and believe me there is a difference.You will still come up a few miles short on some trips,but most of the time the miles are pretty close.On my last two oputings before retirement again I drove for Swift at 40 cts. a mile and Roehl at 38 cts a mile.Pay at Roehl was a whole lot better.Under the HMG payscale you are lucky to get paid for 80% of your actual mile driven.
-
Even running the fridge in the Winter may not leave you with enough energy to start the truck = I use the crock when the truck is running.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 3 of 9