What is better Dry Van or Reefer?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by crazybread, Dec 6, 2017.
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Last edited: Dec 8, 2017
bottomdumpin and Texas_hwy_287 Thank this. -
You spend about 20-30 hours a week in docks versus about 10 with dry van. You can get about $200 to $300 more per week for that. Depending upon how that falls that's $10-$30 more per hour straight time. That's on top of the same 60 you put in with dry van. So that would be double time hourly so you're getting the equivalent of $5-$15 per hour for that additional time.
So it comes down to do you view time in the dock as money for nothing, get your checks for free. -
Next time you guys who run reefer go to a grocery warehouse, ask out loud to the manager, so that all around can hear "So how much of that lumper fee gets kicked back to the dock? How much do YOU guys get of it?" Watch the dirty looks come your way. Been there. Done it. Seen it.
BigHossVolvo and Texas_hwy_287 Thank this. -
Bob Dobalina and Texas_hwy_287 Thank this.
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"First, I clearly stated that some lumper fees are seemingly high."
"Seemingly"? The lumper fees have always been way out of control. I remember in the mid 90s it was outrageous. 200 to unload a load, with breakdown. Now it's about 300. Your company may pay it, and they've had no problem doing that. But some drivers have no choice but to pay the lumper fee themselves or unload it...or drive off like I would do if limited to those two choices. I'm talking O/Os here. No doubt O/Os definitely get ripped by the lumper scam. They have to pay their own lumper fees, so they mostly do it themselves. But if they choose to unload it themselves, the docks punish them by making them wait to get unloaded and / or by making them use a sweat jack instead of an electric jack. This just because they don't play the docks' lumper game and allow their pockets to be picked. Play the lumper game, allow yourself to get scammed by the docks, or get punished. Those are the O/Os' choices.Last edited: Dec 9, 2017
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You know brokers lie, right?
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If you are looking to sit at a dock for 8 hours, both will provide you what you are looking for. If you want to drive and actually work for a living, take a look at the flat deck industry. You arrive at a customer with them nagging you to hurry up and get your straps off, they have 14 customers waiting for what is on your trailer and they are sending everyone over to help unload.
BigHossVolvo, crazybread and Texas_hwy_287 Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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