Lol. I finally get to leave Amarillo this morning. I mean, they had the trailer done last night but I don't need to drive all night to get back for nothing. No loads available, don't want any anyway. I've done 4 in a row, a day off is fine by me, tho I didn't ask for it.
I got 21 miles down the road this morning before stopping for a coffee. Just, in and out. I need my coffee, I can tell ya that. Life long habit, not getting rid of it. I made a very wide, sweeping turn to get into the truck parking lot, halfway through it I heard this loud popping noise. No clue, finished the turn, got out of the truck, didn't find anything right off the bat that was obvious.
Went and got my coffee, got back in the truck and noticed my running lights weren't on on the trailer. Popping noise came to mind, got out and started more closely inspecting things. I was looking at the pigtail line, and finally saw that the wires had all pulled out of the connector to the trailer. More inspection revealed the way they have this truck set up, the trailer nose better be close to the back of the truck cause if not? Well, yeah.
Nothing I could do about it, definitely not my fault. I should be able to get the truck in an L configuration without the lines pulling out. I mean, I didn't start driving trucks today, lolol. So, I called my manager, can you have them send a truck down here to fix this? And they did, eventually. Nothing ever happens quickly in the trucking world. The only person that pays for it is the truck driver. I've never had this happen before.
The mechanic showed up - with everything beyond necessity. He's been doing this a while, prepared for any contingency. I was impressed. He noticed what I had already seen but said nothing about, was curious if he would come to the same conclusion without my suggesting anything. There's a rope around the pigtail. Yes, there is, isn't there?
I had seen it before all of this, I just hadn't thought of the potential ramifications. Obviously, this truck was set up for a trailer that sits much farther forward off the 5th wheel. It's fine, I just don't take responsibility for it. I didn't put that thing up there like that, not to mention I just got into that truck, the truck sat at their yard and then at Peterbilt.
Drove it on out after that. Got on a tollway in Dallas - I'll let the company pay for my getting past a bunch of traffic junk that is continuous on their freeways - and got back to the yard. There before my manager should have left, but she was gone. A great sign, means she doesn't need me tomorrow. But, I got in the office to make a copy of this inspection report that I posted about a few days ago and saw a run for Brownsville. I just thought how I would have taken that run without hesitation.
However, not long after that, Rene sends me pics of my dogs. They both looked pathetic. I know, I've been gone too long. And, while I was gone and they took Aspyn to the vet, the vet determined she has heartworms. Lots of heartworms. Dollar bill signs instantly fill my mind.
Well it's late. Addler is all crashed out, so is Aspyn. I mean, seriously out of it. Lol
I think I will join them in lala sleep land.
Thursday, March 8, 2018
Tuesday, March 6, 2018
Barnsdall, Oklahoma
Well, a somewhat eventful trip. It's only like 350 miles or so from origin to destination point. But, a while after driving down the road, the orange engine light came back on and a notice about some sort of thing associated with cruise control - which did stop working. I sent a pic of it to my manager, said the truck was working fine, I'm just going to keep driving it. She said fine.
Further up on up the line, about 120 miles, is a weigh station that you come to shortly after entering Oklahoma. It seems like it's always open and they don't use easy pass system. If you're in a truck, they're pulling you in there to weigh you. It doesn't appear to be a high truck traffic route such as most Interstates are, so trucks really don't get backed up much.
Well, there was a State Trooper in there, not something you normally see. I could see they were having a conversation among themselves and this trooper kept looking up at me through the window. He apparently had decided that he was going to do a full inspection of my truck. I really don't like these things. They usually find something wrong, write you up for it and take up a lot of time doing it. If everything isn't perfect, you're screwed.
But, it's part of the business, nothing I can do about it, it's implied consent. If you have a commercial driver's license, you basically give up the right to "probable cause" when it comes to truck inspections. They can pull you over at any time, anywhere just for the purpose alone with no violation having had been observed or committed. I was ready for him though. I always check all my documentation before I leave - they have a lot more regulation they dump on hazmat drivers than regular drivers.
You have to have this little book that tells first responders what to do in case of an emergency with the material you're hauling. It has to be within easy reach of where you're sitting. You have to have the bill of lading, pressure test sheet, weight ticket, etc also right there. If it's not within easy reach, they write you up a $200 plus fine. Of course you have this huge binder full of HaZmat authorties and exemptions and this and that. Page after page of it.
I was getting out of the truck, he said to get back in it. Of course, he wanted to see all of that, within reach and that I know exactly where to get it right off the bat. Then a truck inspection - which wasn't a level I thank God or I would have been there at least an hour if not longer. He checks the lights, the frame, tires, etc. Then, it's "get all your paperwork together and then come over to the Tahoe". I get in the passenger side, hand him a ream of paper and sit there and listen - to rock and roll, lol. Imagine that, an older cop listening to AC/DC and such. It took him 30 minutes to input all of that into the computer system. It goes into a personal record on me and for or against the company I am driving for, a system they initiated in 2010 that gives X amount of points against you for the various infractions - lots of them, pages of them in fact - that you can be caught involved with. Minor to major.
Actually, that whole ordeal took 45 minutes, a level I would have taken at least an hour and a half. I was lucky that this run isn't that long. I wanted to get to where I wanted to be, park the truck and get with my plan. Anyway, he prints out a paper, hands it to me to sign, says no infractions, sends me along my merry way. Now, this is really good for me. Companies absolutely hate when a driver gets pulled over and then gets written up for malfunctioning lights or such. It goes against the company. If enough of it occurs, they are assessed with a higher score and that company's trucks get pulled over more. So, this particular inspection was a win-win for me. Cost me time, but the results were worth it.
After that, I drove up to Bartlesville, undecided whether I was going to get a room or not. Definitely decided to park next to the bowling alley where I had parked to spend the night at the hotel next to it twice now, once at my expense the other time at company expense. There is a fabulous Mexican food restaurant there, which is why I went there to begin with. I went in there and ate a wonderful meal of Carne Asada with all the fixings and then, got back to the truck and decided not to waste money on a room. The rooms last night were much higher than the last time I was there. I checked all the hotel deal sites, just no good deals to be had. Why, I have no clue.
Anyway, I just got done eating breakfast at the only restaurant in town in Barnsdall - it's directly across the street from the plant, they have excellent coffee. Decided to spend the rest of the time here in the sleeper. This is one of few plants you go to where they actually allow you to run your truck's engine while you're getting unloaded. That's because they don't have a room for drivers to lounge in here. It's in the 40's, no way am I sitting in a cold truck for endless hours.
I just realized that today is election day in Texas. If I get out of here in the next hour or so, I can still make it back in time to vote. I'm a firm believer in voting, this just caught me by surprise. I follow politics, yes, but the voting day I didn't see until today and it just eluded me.
In other news, the house has been selected and deposit money made on the house to rent. For my friends that is. They will be able to afford this place without another renter. Which is a very good deal. They could still get a renter if they want to, that's up to them. Anyway, I'm just glad we got a place for them out of the way. That was a big one, considering this little town really doesn't have that much rentals going on all the time. The next thing is to get the utilities and such turned on and then, get them moved in there.
The unfortunate part of all of this is that tensions have been running high, especially for the lady and she kind of blew up on us a couple days ago. I started receiving a lot of very negative texts from her- when I wasn't even speaking to her. She also blew up on the other roommate, who was egging it on because he was fed up with it. They have that kind of relationship where it goes well for a while but then they go head to head with other and it gets ugly. I didn't respond to any of her texts that night, I wanted no part of it.
And that's it for now. I'm currently just trying to save up money. I'd like to get 10 grand saved up for emergency expense use and then start saving for other things. At the rate I'm going, maybe 4 more months and I'll have that ten grand saved in spite of having 10% taken out for retirement, medical insurance, huge taxes now that I'm in a higher tax bracket and of course normal monthly expenditures. It's been a long time since I've been in this economic situation where I can live my life and still save a lot of money.
Now that I'm in a decent truck that isn't trashed out on the inside and especially the sleeper, plus has a built in refrigerator, I'm really good with this.
Whoops, the dude is banging on the connections. That means the truck is unloaded.
I'll have to finish this later in a different post.
Further up on up the line, about 120 miles, is a weigh station that you come to shortly after entering Oklahoma. It seems like it's always open and they don't use easy pass system. If you're in a truck, they're pulling you in there to weigh you. It doesn't appear to be a high truck traffic route such as most Interstates are, so trucks really don't get backed up much.
Well, there was a State Trooper in there, not something you normally see. I could see they were having a conversation among themselves and this trooper kept looking up at me through the window. He apparently had decided that he was going to do a full inspection of my truck. I really don't like these things. They usually find something wrong, write you up for it and take up a lot of time doing it. If everything isn't perfect, you're screwed.
But, it's part of the business, nothing I can do about it, it's implied consent. If you have a commercial driver's license, you basically give up the right to "probable cause" when it comes to truck inspections. They can pull you over at any time, anywhere just for the purpose alone with no violation having had been observed or committed. I was ready for him though. I always check all my documentation before I leave - they have a lot more regulation they dump on hazmat drivers than regular drivers.
You have to have this little book that tells first responders what to do in case of an emergency with the material you're hauling. It has to be within easy reach of where you're sitting. You have to have the bill of lading, pressure test sheet, weight ticket, etc also right there. If it's not within easy reach, they write you up a $200 plus fine. Of course you have this huge binder full of HaZmat authorties and exemptions and this and that. Page after page of it.
I was getting out of the truck, he said to get back in it. Of course, he wanted to see all of that, within reach and that I know exactly where to get it right off the bat. Then a truck inspection - which wasn't a level I thank God or I would have been there at least an hour if not longer. He checks the lights, the frame, tires, etc. Then, it's "get all your paperwork together and then come over to the Tahoe". I get in the passenger side, hand him a ream of paper and sit there and listen - to rock and roll, lol. Imagine that, an older cop listening to AC/DC and such. It took him 30 minutes to input all of that into the computer system. It goes into a personal record on me and for or against the company I am driving for, a system they initiated in 2010 that gives X amount of points against you for the various infractions - lots of them, pages of them in fact - that you can be caught involved with. Minor to major.
Actually, that whole ordeal took 45 minutes, a level I would have taken at least an hour and a half. I was lucky that this run isn't that long. I wanted to get to where I wanted to be, park the truck and get with my plan. Anyway, he prints out a paper, hands it to me to sign, says no infractions, sends me along my merry way. Now, this is really good for me. Companies absolutely hate when a driver gets pulled over and then gets written up for malfunctioning lights or such. It goes against the company. If enough of it occurs, they are assessed with a higher score and that company's trucks get pulled over more. So, this particular inspection was a win-win for me. Cost me time, but the results were worth it.
After that, I drove up to Bartlesville, undecided whether I was going to get a room or not. Definitely decided to park next to the bowling alley where I had parked to spend the night at the hotel next to it twice now, once at my expense the other time at company expense. There is a fabulous Mexican food restaurant there, which is why I went there to begin with. I went in there and ate a wonderful meal of Carne Asada with all the fixings and then, got back to the truck and decided not to waste money on a room. The rooms last night were much higher than the last time I was there. I checked all the hotel deal sites, just no good deals to be had. Why, I have no clue.
Anyway, I just got done eating breakfast at the only restaurant in town in Barnsdall - it's directly across the street from the plant, they have excellent coffee. Decided to spend the rest of the time here in the sleeper. This is one of few plants you go to where they actually allow you to run your truck's engine while you're getting unloaded. That's because they don't have a room for drivers to lounge in here. It's in the 40's, no way am I sitting in a cold truck for endless hours.
I just realized that today is election day in Texas. If I get out of here in the next hour or so, I can still make it back in time to vote. I'm a firm believer in voting, this just caught me by surprise. I follow politics, yes, but the voting day I didn't see until today and it just eluded me.
In other news, the house has been selected and deposit money made on the house to rent. For my friends that is. They will be able to afford this place without another renter. Which is a very good deal. They could still get a renter if they want to, that's up to them. Anyway, I'm just glad we got a place for them out of the way. That was a big one, considering this little town really doesn't have that much rentals going on all the time. The next thing is to get the utilities and such turned on and then, get them moved in there.
The unfortunate part of all of this is that tensions have been running high, especially for the lady and she kind of blew up on us a couple days ago. I started receiving a lot of very negative texts from her- when I wasn't even speaking to her. She also blew up on the other roommate, who was egging it on because he was fed up with it. They have that kind of relationship where it goes well for a while but then they go head to head with other and it gets ugly. I didn't respond to any of her texts that night, I wanted no part of it.
And that's it for now. I'm currently just trying to save up money. I'd like to get 10 grand saved up for emergency expense use and then start saving for other things. At the rate I'm going, maybe 4 more months and I'll have that ten grand saved in spite of having 10% taken out for retirement, medical insurance, huge taxes now that I'm in a higher tax bracket and of course normal monthly expenditures. It's been a long time since I've been in this economic situation where I can live my life and still save a lot of money.
Now that I'm in a decent truck that isn't trashed out on the inside and especially the sleeper, plus has a built in refrigerator, I'm really good with this.
Whoops, the dude is banging on the connections. That means the truck is unloaded.
I'll have to finish this later in a different post.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
Short trip to El Dorado over and done with. The new truck had the orange engine light come on - but nothing happened. I just stayed on. I have driven lots of trucks with orange engine lights on that the dealer can't ever figure out what's wrong with it and you eventually just ignore it. Now, the red engine light, completely different story. That's, shut the truck down right now type of deal. The interior of that truck is absolutely beautiful . How those people could live in it for almost a million miles and keep it in that great of a condition, well, I know how, it's just amazing to finally find someone that actually cares enough to take care of a rig that doesn't belong to them.
Hitting it again early tomorrow. Get to the plant by 7 am, get loaded, head up to Barnsdall, Oklahoma, north of Tulsa. That's also an overnight trip but probably twice as long as this El Dorado one. I figure to see if the truck does alright, bring it back, tell them it needs to be taken to the shop and find out what the engine light is, but I want that truck. They can dump me back into that automatic pile of junk for a few days while they fix the thing. Barnsdall is a better run because it's more miles plus it also has a lot of detention time, usually anyway. But, I have always made it back that night on the second day from that trip. I usually arrive so early that I'm tempted to get a hotel.
As it stands, last night I drove to the nearest town, parked in a strip mall parking lot (tractor only, they make you unhook the trailer to unload it), went into Applebee's and had some dinner. Spent my 10 hour break in the parking lot and then got up at 4 am, got a cup of coffee and headed back to the plant. That got me home 30 minutes ago, about 9:30 am.
Now, on the house searching front. Rene went ballistic yesterday. Just flipped the switch. I wasn't even talking to her and started getting all these outrageous text messages. She does this from time to time, out of the blue. Everyone is claiming stress over the move. Wonderful, go look in a mirror and spew out all that vileness, I don't need it. Over 20 texts, I didn't reply to a single word of it. If I had, I probably would have let loose and that would have just made the situation worse.
Anyway, I put out ads on local Facebook groups - most of them are groups for selling stuff, but they let you put up ads asking for things as well. I got several responses - and a bunch of moochers piling on my ads trying to get the houses being offered to me, but one of them stood out. A 3 bedroom, 2 bath house with a huge, fenced in back yard. $800 per month which is in their range. Note, this isn't for me, it's for he 2 living here. They have the monthly rent money, there will be $250 after $800 that they already pay, which will mostly cover satellite and wifi. Somewhere around another $200 to $250 for utilities. I pledged a flat rate of $200 for watching my dogs - trust me, dog sitting for dogs for as much time as I'm gone would cost far more than that at a kennel or even just a person coming over to take care of them. They get a huge back yard to play and run around in.
So, I sent the info to Donny - the other roommate here - and informed him if he wants to go for it, he prolly best go looking tonight (last night) cause there are people piling up on my house request ads. so, he went over there. Somehow he got into the house, took some pics. Looked like fresh paint, nice hardwood flooring, nice condition. I dunno how big the bedrooms are, probably not terrible large judging from the size of the house, but this fits their price range and is a decent neighborhood. We are going this afternoon at 1 to meet with the owner and see about getting it..IF we get this house, then that'st most of the battle right there. The rest of it is just getting the utilities turned on, satellite installed and wifi installed. And moving there, lol. It's also less than 2 miles away from here, so commuting back on forth will be easy for her.
So, fingers crossed and prayers up. I hope to have this phase of this behind me today. Just too much to deal with these people losing it. I understand they are in bad health, really don't want to be moving around, etc. I'm doing what I can to help them, and if they get into it, I'm sure they can just stay there if they decide they want to for as long as they want to. Donny doesn't care where he lives for the most part as long as it isn't ghetto. He spends most of his time in his bedroom. I don't know who is getting what room or how that's working out, I have no input into that and I don't care. Let's just get a house and get this over with.
Now, this new truck I'm in. I was opening the cabinet doors and was literally shocked upon opening one of them to find a built in refrigerator. It just looks like a cabinet door like the rest of the interior of the truck from the outside. I just bought a ac/dc cooler, so I guess I wasted my money on that if I end up keeping this truck - which I'm 99% sure I will. Even at a million miles, it's a far nicer rig than that pile of junk Volvo. This one has a bunk bed, which is nice for storing clothes and duffel bags. I has a clothes closet for hanging clothes and a couple other smaller closets for putting your person things. It's completely cleaned out, even the far interiors of the closets, which was impressive. The only hesitancy is the million mile part. Truck parts don't last forever. Alternators, fuel pumps, fuel injectors, power steering pumps, electronic sensors.
Anyway, I have basically a full day home today. My only goal is to go with Donny and see if we can secure this house. We can have ourselves a party afterward if it clicks. Since I have an early load time tomorrow, foregone conclusion I will be up near Barnsdall early afternoon. I will probably get myself a hotel room. I didn't last night because I figured I would want Monday night. I figure to be there no later than 3 pm, which is a 17 hour layover. The town with the hotels is called Bartlesville. Barnsdall doesn't have any hotels. It doesn't have much of anything lol. A restaurant and a gas station. And the plant. Bartlesville is something like 21 miles away. Been there done that. In fact, I think I'll try the hotel sites after this and see what kind of deals there may be.
Well, I think I'll end this one, actually. Breakfast is almost served.
Hitting it again early tomorrow. Get to the plant by 7 am, get loaded, head up to Barnsdall, Oklahoma, north of Tulsa. That's also an overnight trip but probably twice as long as this El Dorado one. I figure to see if the truck does alright, bring it back, tell them it needs to be taken to the shop and find out what the engine light is, but I want that truck. They can dump me back into that automatic pile of junk for a few days while they fix the thing. Barnsdall is a better run because it's more miles plus it also has a lot of detention time, usually anyway. But, I have always made it back that night on the second day from that trip. I usually arrive so early that I'm tempted to get a hotel.
As it stands, last night I drove to the nearest town, parked in a strip mall parking lot (tractor only, they make you unhook the trailer to unload it), went into Applebee's and had some dinner. Spent my 10 hour break in the parking lot and then got up at 4 am, got a cup of coffee and headed back to the plant. That got me home 30 minutes ago, about 9:30 am.
Now, on the house searching front. Rene went ballistic yesterday. Just flipped the switch. I wasn't even talking to her and started getting all these outrageous text messages. She does this from time to time, out of the blue. Everyone is claiming stress over the move. Wonderful, go look in a mirror and spew out all that vileness, I don't need it. Over 20 texts, I didn't reply to a single word of it. If I had, I probably would have let loose and that would have just made the situation worse.
Anyway, I put out ads on local Facebook groups - most of them are groups for selling stuff, but they let you put up ads asking for things as well. I got several responses - and a bunch of moochers piling on my ads trying to get the houses being offered to me, but one of them stood out. A 3 bedroom, 2 bath house with a huge, fenced in back yard. $800 per month which is in their range. Note, this isn't for me, it's for he 2 living here. They have the monthly rent money, there will be $250 after $800 that they already pay, which will mostly cover satellite and wifi. Somewhere around another $200 to $250 for utilities. I pledged a flat rate of $200 for watching my dogs - trust me, dog sitting for dogs for as much time as I'm gone would cost far more than that at a kennel or even just a person coming over to take care of them. They get a huge back yard to play and run around in.
So, I sent the info to Donny - the other roommate here - and informed him if he wants to go for it, he prolly best go looking tonight (last night) cause there are people piling up on my house request ads. so, he went over there. Somehow he got into the house, took some pics. Looked like fresh paint, nice hardwood flooring, nice condition. I dunno how big the bedrooms are, probably not terrible large judging from the size of the house, but this fits their price range and is a decent neighborhood. We are going this afternoon at 1 to meet with the owner and see about getting it..IF we get this house, then that'st most of the battle right there. The rest of it is just getting the utilities turned on, satellite installed and wifi installed. And moving there, lol. It's also less than 2 miles away from here, so commuting back on forth will be easy for her.
So, fingers crossed and prayers up. I hope to have this phase of this behind me today. Just too much to deal with these people losing it. I understand they are in bad health, really don't want to be moving around, etc. I'm doing what I can to help them, and if they get into it, I'm sure they can just stay there if they decide they want to for as long as they want to. Donny doesn't care where he lives for the most part as long as it isn't ghetto. He spends most of his time in his bedroom. I don't know who is getting what room or how that's working out, I have no input into that and I don't care. Let's just get a house and get this over with.
Now, this new truck I'm in. I was opening the cabinet doors and was literally shocked upon opening one of them to find a built in refrigerator. It just looks like a cabinet door like the rest of the interior of the truck from the outside. I just bought a ac/dc cooler, so I guess I wasted my money on that if I end up keeping this truck - which I'm 99% sure I will. Even at a million miles, it's a far nicer rig than that pile of junk Volvo. This one has a bunk bed, which is nice for storing clothes and duffel bags. I has a clothes closet for hanging clothes and a couple other smaller closets for putting your person things. It's completely cleaned out, even the far interiors of the closets, which was impressive. The only hesitancy is the million mile part. Truck parts don't last forever. Alternators, fuel pumps, fuel injectors, power steering pumps, electronic sensors.
Anyway, I have basically a full day home today. My only goal is to go with Donny and see if we can secure this house. We can have ourselves a party afterward if it clicks. Since I have an early load time tomorrow, foregone conclusion I will be up near Barnsdall early afternoon. I will probably get myself a hotel room. I didn't last night because I figured I would want Monday night. I figure to be there no later than 3 pm, which is a 17 hour layover. The town with the hotels is called Bartlesville. Barnsdall doesn't have any hotels. It doesn't have much of anything lol. A restaurant and a gas station. And the plant. Bartlesville is something like 21 miles away. Been there done that. In fact, I think I'll try the hotel sites after this and see what kind of deals there may be.
Well, I think I'll end this one, actually. Breakfast is almost served.
Friday, March 2, 2018
Finally got this trip over with this morning. Got up, made a cup of coffee in the hotel room's coffee pot, took a long, hot shower, got out of there and got on down the road. Didn't stop until I got into Texas and at a Love's maybe 30 miles after getting into the state. I am slowly figuring out how to deal with this job. That includes simply having full - or near full - fuel tanks when I get to the plant.
They ask you if you need fuel. Yes. How much? 100 gallons (or whatever at the time). When I tell them I need fuel, they always cut the gross weight of the truck to within a few hundred pounds of 80k. When I don't tell them that, they cut off up to 10k pounds. I don't get it. But I'd rather be lighter and not get pulled into weigh stations so much. These trucks have PrePasses in them, I get the okay to bypass a lot of stations but not all of them.
Anyway, Ann was at the office so I talked to her for a while. When I pulled into the yard, there were 8 trucks sitting in there. I never see that many trucks. Turns out, one of them was for me. Mark the 6th truck I will have been in since joining this company. However, this one wasn't forced. She just presented it to me and said, if you don't want it, I'll let Joe have it. I looked at it. Beautiful truck. 2016 Peterbilt. Got inside, very nicely taken care of. I mean, really, nice interior, that I could see anyway.
Ann said you can have it if you want it. Well, let me take it out on a run or two first? The truck I'm in would be used as a backup truck for those that have trucks that break down. Nobody wants in that thing, so not putting anyone out. So, there it is. There is a serious drawback to this one though. When I fired it up, the odometer came on. 957,000 miles on it. In two years, someone put almost a million miles on this truck? No way. Has to be a team. Teams do way more driving. They make more money too, but at a cost. Not worth it to me. I mean, even if I had a honey driving with me and we had a relationship, that's still a lot of time in a small box. Nerves can wear thin.
Now, the problem with a truck with that many miles. Parts wear out. Inevitable. But, can it be any worse than the thing I'm in that has broken down 3 times in less than a month and a half? I suppose it could be, but the thing is soooo nice inside. Just plain beautiful. A standard transmission. Certainly worth trying. That's a lot of miles, but everything is still "new" as far as age goes. It's hard to tell. I'm giving her a whirl tomorrow and see what happens.
I have a late load time. Noon. The plant I'm going to is the one in El Dorado that takes 6 hours (minimum) to unload. But, that's 5 hours of detention pay. A short run and I'll be home the next morning, which is Sunday. Then out again Monday morning to Barnsdall, Oklahoma, a place I've been to many times now, also elongated delivery times, but, those are the best. I'm hoping for a Brownsville run after that and hopefully at least a day's worth of waiting for a trailer. That is ideal for huge paychecks. 1,200 miles of driving plus X amount of hours times 22. Plus stop pay, which every trip has at least 4 stops to record.
I figure, if I stay at this job long enough, I'm going to find the hotels that are cheap but good along the way. Brownsville, I found one but haven't tried it yet. The company has paid for the hotel stays. But, I figured it out. I can sit in the truck 24 hours a day and get paid - 24 hours a days. But if i take a company paid hotel, I get 10 hours deducted off that pay. Well, if I take I pay for my own hotel, at around $60, I get a hotel, get paid for the 24 hours and make much more than taking 10 off. There aren't any rules against doing this, it's the best way to go. I mean, if she got me another stay at the Marriot, I'd take the loss just for the fun of staying in a fancy hotel lol.
As it stands. I doubt I will have enough available hours to make it back on Monday's trip. Meaning a 34 hour layover at a hotel somewhere. Which is fine by me, I don't pay for those layover. They aren't paid an hourly wage, so might as well get whatever the company is willing to get for me. The first trip is to El Dorado. It's 3 hours up and back - at most. We no longer have to log hours sitting at either the loading plant or unloading plant, so that really takes a lot of hours off the weekly total, leaving more available to do more runs. But that will bring up me up near 60 hours, then I have Barnsdall, Ok on Monday. Almost 7 hour drive plus at least 2 hours loading. It will be cutting it close. I'll have enough time to get into the plant, shut off the timer and get it unloaded. After that, it's the luck of the draw. There is a town about 20 miles away that has several hotels. I'm just guessing here, making home is better but I always try to plan for the worst case scenario.
But then again, making money is not a bad scenario. I actually don't want to do a 34 hour reset. I would rather get a good long trip after these two short ones and beef up my next paycheck. But, that's not going to be possible. This job makes huge money if you're willing to work basically all the time. Still have some home time here and there, always have a 34 hour reset. But, if you take 3 days off like I did last weekend, it affects the next paycheck. I needed that time off tho. I'm not going to feel bad about it, just put the nose to the wheel and get it cranking. I pushed myself so that I could get back without too much time on the clock for today. It's not complicated but kind of hard to explain.
You have a 60 hour/6 day clock or a 70 hour/7 day clock. We are on the 70 hour one. It basically allows you to drive up to 70 hours in the last 7 days. So let's say i drove yesterday and I ended up with 70 hours on the clock. That means I have nothing for today, because I drove all 70 hours out. But let's say that I drove yesterday and ended up with 64 hours. That leaves me 6 hours drive time today.
Now, what factors in are short days like today. Tomorrow, today takes effect and 7 days ago drops off. Well, 7 days ago i was on the clock almost 14 hours. Today, I was on the clock 3 hours. So, that 14 drops off and now, I will have and extra 11 hours showing up. Does that make sense? There is no requirement to take a 34 hour reset, but most companies do it because it's the best way to just get your clock reset, start at a full 70 or 60 and get down the highway.
Well anyway, I'd like to say I'm excited about getting into a newer truck tomorrow, but the million miles is rather disconcerting. But who knows? Maybe I'll drive it 100k miles without any troubles. Roll of the dice.
Meanwhile, their hunt for a house to rent goes on. I found one tonight that I think will fit the bill. It's a cozy 3 bedroom, 1-1/2 bathroom place that looks decent. Smaller bedrooms but the monthly price tag on it is much smaller, too. I"m hoping they can nail something down soon, April 1st isn't getting and further away.
I don't have to be up early tomorrow, don't have to be at the plant until 11 am. meaning leave out of here around 9:30 am. A later time for these shorter runs is preferrable. I can get up there around 4 or 5 pm, drop the trailer, park the tractor outside their fence, go off duty for 10 hours and then drive back early in the morning. Have yet another half day to be at home.
But, I'm tired, it's getting my version of late.
G'nite.
They ask you if you need fuel. Yes. How much? 100 gallons (or whatever at the time). When I tell them I need fuel, they always cut the gross weight of the truck to within a few hundred pounds of 80k. When I don't tell them that, they cut off up to 10k pounds. I don't get it. But I'd rather be lighter and not get pulled into weigh stations so much. These trucks have PrePasses in them, I get the okay to bypass a lot of stations but not all of them.
Anyway, Ann was at the office so I talked to her for a while. When I pulled into the yard, there were 8 trucks sitting in there. I never see that many trucks. Turns out, one of them was for me. Mark the 6th truck I will have been in since joining this company. However, this one wasn't forced. She just presented it to me and said, if you don't want it, I'll let Joe have it. I looked at it. Beautiful truck. 2016 Peterbilt. Got inside, very nicely taken care of. I mean, really, nice interior, that I could see anyway.
Ann said you can have it if you want it. Well, let me take it out on a run or two first? The truck I'm in would be used as a backup truck for those that have trucks that break down. Nobody wants in that thing, so not putting anyone out. So, there it is. There is a serious drawback to this one though. When I fired it up, the odometer came on. 957,000 miles on it. In two years, someone put almost a million miles on this truck? No way. Has to be a team. Teams do way more driving. They make more money too, but at a cost. Not worth it to me. I mean, even if I had a honey driving with me and we had a relationship, that's still a lot of time in a small box. Nerves can wear thin.
Now, the problem with a truck with that many miles. Parts wear out. Inevitable. But, can it be any worse than the thing I'm in that has broken down 3 times in less than a month and a half? I suppose it could be, but the thing is soooo nice inside. Just plain beautiful. A standard transmission. Certainly worth trying. That's a lot of miles, but everything is still "new" as far as age goes. It's hard to tell. I'm giving her a whirl tomorrow and see what happens.
I have a late load time. Noon. The plant I'm going to is the one in El Dorado that takes 6 hours (minimum) to unload. But, that's 5 hours of detention pay. A short run and I'll be home the next morning, which is Sunday. Then out again Monday morning to Barnsdall, Oklahoma, a place I've been to many times now, also elongated delivery times, but, those are the best. I'm hoping for a Brownsville run after that and hopefully at least a day's worth of waiting for a trailer. That is ideal for huge paychecks. 1,200 miles of driving plus X amount of hours times 22. Plus stop pay, which every trip has at least 4 stops to record.
I figure, if I stay at this job long enough, I'm going to find the hotels that are cheap but good along the way. Brownsville, I found one but haven't tried it yet. The company has paid for the hotel stays. But, I figured it out. I can sit in the truck 24 hours a day and get paid - 24 hours a days. But if i take a company paid hotel, I get 10 hours deducted off that pay. Well, if I take I pay for my own hotel, at around $60, I get a hotel, get paid for the 24 hours and make much more than taking 10 off. There aren't any rules against doing this, it's the best way to go. I mean, if she got me another stay at the Marriot, I'd take the loss just for the fun of staying in a fancy hotel lol.
As it stands. I doubt I will have enough available hours to make it back on Monday's trip. Meaning a 34 hour layover at a hotel somewhere. Which is fine by me, I don't pay for those layover. They aren't paid an hourly wage, so might as well get whatever the company is willing to get for me. The first trip is to El Dorado. It's 3 hours up and back - at most. We no longer have to log hours sitting at either the loading plant or unloading plant, so that really takes a lot of hours off the weekly total, leaving more available to do more runs. But that will bring up me up near 60 hours, then I have Barnsdall, Ok on Monday. Almost 7 hour drive plus at least 2 hours loading. It will be cutting it close. I'll have enough time to get into the plant, shut off the timer and get it unloaded. After that, it's the luck of the draw. There is a town about 20 miles away that has several hotels. I'm just guessing here, making home is better but I always try to plan for the worst case scenario.
But then again, making money is not a bad scenario. I actually don't want to do a 34 hour reset. I would rather get a good long trip after these two short ones and beef up my next paycheck. But, that's not going to be possible. This job makes huge money if you're willing to work basically all the time. Still have some home time here and there, always have a 34 hour reset. But, if you take 3 days off like I did last weekend, it affects the next paycheck. I needed that time off tho. I'm not going to feel bad about it, just put the nose to the wheel and get it cranking. I pushed myself so that I could get back without too much time on the clock for today. It's not complicated but kind of hard to explain.
You have a 60 hour/6 day clock or a 70 hour/7 day clock. We are on the 70 hour one. It basically allows you to drive up to 70 hours in the last 7 days. So let's say i drove yesterday and I ended up with 70 hours on the clock. That means I have nothing for today, because I drove all 70 hours out. But let's say that I drove yesterday and ended up with 64 hours. That leaves me 6 hours drive time today.
Now, what factors in are short days like today. Tomorrow, today takes effect and 7 days ago drops off. Well, 7 days ago i was on the clock almost 14 hours. Today, I was on the clock 3 hours. So, that 14 drops off and now, I will have and extra 11 hours showing up. Does that make sense? There is no requirement to take a 34 hour reset, but most companies do it because it's the best way to just get your clock reset, start at a full 70 or 60 and get down the highway.
Well anyway, I'd like to say I'm excited about getting into a newer truck tomorrow, but the million miles is rather disconcerting. But who knows? Maybe I'll drive it 100k miles without any troubles. Roll of the dice.
Meanwhile, their hunt for a house to rent goes on. I found one tonight that I think will fit the bill. It's a cozy 3 bedroom, 1-1/2 bathroom place that looks decent. Smaller bedrooms but the monthly price tag on it is much smaller, too. I"m hoping they can nail something down soon, April 1st isn't getting and further away.
I don't have to be up early tomorrow, don't have to be at the plant until 11 am. meaning leave out of here around 9:30 am. A later time for these shorter runs is preferrable. I can get up there around 4 or 5 pm, drop the trailer, park the tractor outside their fence, go off duty for 10 hours and then drive back early in the morning. Have yet another half day to be at home.
But, I'm tired, it's getting my version of late.
G'nite.
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Long day. Got up at 6:00 am, took off. 435 miles later, was at the plant in Charleston. This was a drop and hook affair. Drop the trailer I brought up, hook up to empty trailer, pull it out, drop it out of the way, rehook to trailer I brought up and back it into the hole, unhook, then rehook to the empty. Sounds like a lot but it didn't take 15 minutes to get that done. But, I was there an hour anyway. Got out of there, drove another 165 miles and decided to call it a day. 11 plus hours, almost 600 miles.
I wasn't feeling to good today, otherwise I still had an hour and 20 minutes I could have driven. No regrets tho, I can't make it home tomorrow anyway, even if I had driven the extra miles. I'll drive ten or 11 hours tomorrow - however long it takes to rack up 600 miles and that will leave me with about 3-1/2 hours of driving on Friday. That will leave me open to going out on Saturday or Sunday if she has anything for me. I had my time off, I need to earn some money.
______________________
Well, it's now Thursday. I drove 652 miles today. Just straight through. I would have made near 700 if I hadn't encountered unbelievable construction backup that was so bad, Maps told me to get off the Interstate and take this winding, alternate route. I should have listened to Maps. I ignored it and paid for it. The Interstate completely shut down to a standstill, my only saving grace was Maps gave me an alternate way out - much longer than the first route it gave me, but WAY faster than what I was going to go through there. I had an agenda- get at least 600 miles today and sitting in an hour and a half of traffic jam wasn't going to cut it.
What town was I in that all happened .... Little Rock I think. No it wasn't Little Rock it was before that. I was so wrapped up in that ordeal I don't even remember what town I was in. Anyway, Maps ended up having me on a small 2 lane highway that runs alongside I-40. We were going 60 mph - on the Interstate they were at various stages of stopped to maybe 30mph. I usually listen to her telling me about alternate routes for closures or backups, not sure why I ignored her today. This went on for miles and miles and miles. I watched the stop an go traffic over there and just thought, I'd be going crazy sitting in that nonsense for that long. Surely the state could figure out something better than almost shutting down the highway like that for that long of a distance.
Well, anyway, I always plan out where I'm going to stop. I have X amount of hours and minutes, that will get me to wherever. I usually cut it pretty close, I want to maximize my hours out there and get this over with. Well, before I entered that town with the traffic jam, I was going clear to a Love's truckstop much further down the road. I was going to fuel up for tomorrow, get my free shower, spend some quality time in there as it stands, and just hang out in the truck. But when I realized I wasn't going to make it there, I got out another app that shows ALL the truckstop, both s***holes and mega truckstops alike. I settled on one that is, actually, another 10 or so miles down the road.
Then I thought, why? I've been on the road 3 full days, why not just get a cheap hotel and get out of that truck? I was looking at hotels in a town called Arkadelphia, it's in Arkansas. I saw several hotels that were cheap, I chose the Super 8. It had the best ratings on the cheap brands and when I say cheap, this place was going for $37 per night. I booked it, hoped to high heaven it wasn't a Roach Coach Inn. Got here, found parking impossible.
In fact, I pulled into the parking lot, realized I couldn't turn around. I went around back, it was a dead end, sort of. I saw tire tracks, evident another truck had been through there before. So, I drove through the field beyond the motel, came up to a ditch. Not a bad one, but geeze. I saw where the other truck had plowed through it and I thought, naw. I saw a much lessor deep portion of it, the truck went over that easily, into an open lot. I parked there, walked back over to the hotel. Well, I no guarantee nuttin' if you no park on hotel property. I was thinking right off: This is a bad place to stay, the room is going to be hell. But I already paid for it, no choice. Non refundable deal on Expedia.
The property next door is unoccupied. It was a restaurant, it's just empty now with a huge parking lot. I decided to pull in there - no signs saying no parking, no trucks, etcetera. Cool. Held my breath coming into this room. Boy was I surprised! Nice, fresh smelling carpet. Furniture in perfect condition. Lovely king sized bed, very comfortable. Quite window ac. 44 inch flat screen tv - haven't checked out channels, really only interested in watching the news anyway. Refrigerator, microwave, hair dryer, coffee. I walked into the bathroom. No mold, mildew, perfect condition! For $37!! It doesn't always work out this way, lol.
This is how I used to think about Motel 6, which basically turned into - well I'll keep those thoughts to myself. So, I'm just relaxing : ) You get what you pay for - usually. In this case, I lucked out and got much better than what I paid for. Just didn't feel like sleeping in the truck, but also didn't feel like shelling out big bucks for a guaranteed nice place.
I have less than a 3 hour drive back to the yard in the morning. I'll have some home time. Unless she throws a loophole as I drive in there an she has a load that has to go out tomorrow morning. I'm not going to just hang out at this hotel to avoid that. I would rather get in there, if there is another run, take it and run with it. If not, I get a partial day home and probably out Saturday, if not then definitely Sunday.
I sometimes get lost on my blog, don't remember what I have discussed or not discussed because life gets very busy. So if this repeats, oh well. But I bought all this stuff to fix up that bathroom which I used to be in when I was in the other bedroom. It's a private bathroom, no other entrance than from the bedroom. It also has the ugliest vanity and one of the most disgusting sinks I have ever seen.
_____________
A few more hours passed. A very long discussion with my friends in Georgia. They're really great people, very good friends. But they have a family and they have a household. They are coming back. I didn't ask her that tho, Taylor that is. She said, "are you ready for kids". I thought about that for a while. Just giving myself an honest evaluation of having toddlers around and the demands they inherently are and the environment it is with them around. Yeah, I'm good with it. I like the connection with both my friends - late 20's and early 30's and having kids around. I dealt with the screaming when they were there, I can deal with it again. I think the good far outweighs the bad.
We went off of that and to my idea of having at least 50 acres of land. 100 better. Pricey? Not that bad out of the city limits. At least some of what I have seen. A mix of open land and woods would be great. Room for cows, riding ATV's and hunting. Perhaps fishing if there happens to be a pond or small lake. She loves the idea. Money the issue. Yes, in my case, credit score. Get enough down payment and perhaps a different story. But, at the same time, getting around and talking with people can help as well.
Anyway, that's it for tonight. I'm going to bed soon. Want to get up early, get the drive over with, get home and spend time with friends and dogs : )
I wasn't feeling to good today, otherwise I still had an hour and 20 minutes I could have driven. No regrets tho, I can't make it home tomorrow anyway, even if I had driven the extra miles. I'll drive ten or 11 hours tomorrow - however long it takes to rack up 600 miles and that will leave me with about 3-1/2 hours of driving on Friday. That will leave me open to going out on Saturday or Sunday if she has anything for me. I had my time off, I need to earn some money.
______________________
Well, it's now Thursday. I drove 652 miles today. Just straight through. I would have made near 700 if I hadn't encountered unbelievable construction backup that was so bad, Maps told me to get off the Interstate and take this winding, alternate route. I should have listened to Maps. I ignored it and paid for it. The Interstate completely shut down to a standstill, my only saving grace was Maps gave me an alternate way out - much longer than the first route it gave me, but WAY faster than what I was going to go through there. I had an agenda- get at least 600 miles today and sitting in an hour and a half of traffic jam wasn't going to cut it.
What town was I in that all happened .... Little Rock I think. No it wasn't Little Rock it was before that. I was so wrapped up in that ordeal I don't even remember what town I was in. Anyway, Maps ended up having me on a small 2 lane highway that runs alongside I-40. We were going 60 mph - on the Interstate they were at various stages of stopped to maybe 30mph. I usually listen to her telling me about alternate routes for closures or backups, not sure why I ignored her today. This went on for miles and miles and miles. I watched the stop an go traffic over there and just thought, I'd be going crazy sitting in that nonsense for that long. Surely the state could figure out something better than almost shutting down the highway like that for that long of a distance.
Well, anyway, I always plan out where I'm going to stop. I have X amount of hours and minutes, that will get me to wherever. I usually cut it pretty close, I want to maximize my hours out there and get this over with. Well, before I entered that town with the traffic jam, I was going clear to a Love's truckstop much further down the road. I was going to fuel up for tomorrow, get my free shower, spend some quality time in there as it stands, and just hang out in the truck. But when I realized I wasn't going to make it there, I got out another app that shows ALL the truckstop, both s***holes and mega truckstops alike. I settled on one that is, actually, another 10 or so miles down the road.
Then I thought, why? I've been on the road 3 full days, why not just get a cheap hotel and get out of that truck? I was looking at hotels in a town called Arkadelphia, it's in Arkansas. I saw several hotels that were cheap, I chose the Super 8. It had the best ratings on the cheap brands and when I say cheap, this place was going for $37 per night. I booked it, hoped to high heaven it wasn't a Roach Coach Inn. Got here, found parking impossible.
In fact, I pulled into the parking lot, realized I couldn't turn around. I went around back, it was a dead end, sort of. I saw tire tracks, evident another truck had been through there before. So, I drove through the field beyond the motel, came up to a ditch. Not a bad one, but geeze. I saw where the other truck had plowed through it and I thought, naw. I saw a much lessor deep portion of it, the truck went over that easily, into an open lot. I parked there, walked back over to the hotel. Well, I no guarantee nuttin' if you no park on hotel property. I was thinking right off: This is a bad place to stay, the room is going to be hell. But I already paid for it, no choice. Non refundable deal on Expedia.
The property next door is unoccupied. It was a restaurant, it's just empty now with a huge parking lot. I decided to pull in there - no signs saying no parking, no trucks, etcetera. Cool. Held my breath coming into this room. Boy was I surprised! Nice, fresh smelling carpet. Furniture in perfect condition. Lovely king sized bed, very comfortable. Quite window ac. 44 inch flat screen tv - haven't checked out channels, really only interested in watching the news anyway. Refrigerator, microwave, hair dryer, coffee. I walked into the bathroom. No mold, mildew, perfect condition! For $37!! It doesn't always work out this way, lol.
This is how I used to think about Motel 6, which basically turned into - well I'll keep those thoughts to myself. So, I'm just relaxing : ) You get what you pay for - usually. In this case, I lucked out and got much better than what I paid for. Just didn't feel like sleeping in the truck, but also didn't feel like shelling out big bucks for a guaranteed nice place.
I have less than a 3 hour drive back to the yard in the morning. I'll have some home time. Unless she throws a loophole as I drive in there an she has a load that has to go out tomorrow morning. I'm not going to just hang out at this hotel to avoid that. I would rather get in there, if there is another run, take it and run with it. If not, I get a partial day home and probably out Saturday, if not then definitely Sunday.
I sometimes get lost on my blog, don't remember what I have discussed or not discussed because life gets very busy. So if this repeats, oh well. But I bought all this stuff to fix up that bathroom which I used to be in when I was in the other bedroom. It's a private bathroom, no other entrance than from the bedroom. It also has the ugliest vanity and one of the most disgusting sinks I have ever seen.
_____________
A few more hours passed. A very long discussion with my friends in Georgia. They're really great people, very good friends. But they have a family and they have a household. They are coming back. I didn't ask her that tho, Taylor that is. She said, "are you ready for kids". I thought about that for a while. Just giving myself an honest evaluation of having toddlers around and the demands they inherently are and the environment it is with them around. Yeah, I'm good with it. I like the connection with both my friends - late 20's and early 30's and having kids around. I dealt with the screaming when they were there, I can deal with it again. I think the good far outweighs the bad.
We went off of that and to my idea of having at least 50 acres of land. 100 better. Pricey? Not that bad out of the city limits. At least some of what I have seen. A mix of open land and woods would be great. Room for cows, riding ATV's and hunting. Perhaps fishing if there happens to be a pond or small lake. She loves the idea. Money the issue. Yes, in my case, credit score. Get enough down payment and perhaps a different story. But, at the same time, getting around and talking with people can help as well.
Anyway, that's it for tonight. I'm going to bed soon. Want to get up early, get the drive over with, get home and spend time with friends and dogs : )
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Well, I took a chance. Getting where I'm at that is.
Started out this morning. Got to the plant at 6:30 am, got checked in a one place, weighed at another, loaded at yet another and back to the scale house. Where I waited....and waited...and waited.... for hours. Lots of conversations with other drivers during that time, even with a smart phone, it can get pretty boring.
After 2-1/2 hours, they finally called me up there. "Well, they kept doing sample checks, we couldn't let ya go without knowing the samples were going to be good". I guess they finally figured they are good. Ate up m clock tho. I was determined to get in 600 miles. I fell about 40 miles short of it. Drove, drove, drove. Forced to take a 30 minute break which is mostly what kept me from making the full 600.
Anyway, I gambled. I looked at a Love's well down the line and figured I had enough time to get there, get off the clock and get parked. About a 12 minute window, I figured, 12 minutes left on the clock before I absolutely had to get off of it. And stop the truck. The gamble wasn't just the time tho. Actually, the time is math, but you never know if an accident or road construction or steep hills or whatever are going to slow you down. No, nowadays, the gamble is: is there going to be a parking space available when I get there? Cause' honey, after 6:00 pm, you're taking a big chance that there isn't anything available.
When I pulled in here, I saw an "empty" spot, but it was between 2 trucks, next to the curb, basically where you drive through. However, driving through this rather large truck stop, there wasn't a single space available. The Pilot back down the road, I could see from the highway, it was full. I pulled back around hoping that empty spot between the two trucks was still there and walaah. I pulled in there, stopped the truck, got off the clock with 3 minutes to spare.
I saw the driving on the side of me that is - really far out there - and talked to him for a minute. He just laughed, I'm out of hours, I'm not going anywhere - notwithstanding the fact that his truck was in a position to make it very difficult for truck parked across from him to pull out. But, that's not my problem. I'm next to him but I am far enough back that if he moves in the morning before I can, no problem them getting out of there.
I have been sitting here watching dozens and dozens of trucks pulling in here and driving right back out. The problem with pushing the clock nowadays is the parking situation. You might have a place in mind, and it might be doable with the time you have available, but if you get there and there isn't any place to park, you're literally screwed. This is where paper logs saved us. You could still drive a little while down the road and find a place and simply mark it as if you had driven there.
I'm 430 miles from my destination. I was trying to make at least 400, but the plant did that in. Still, not bad, considering. I figure to get up at 6, do my pretrip, get to the fuel pump, fill it up, head out and hope to hit the plant before I have to take a 30 minute break. I mean, if I have to, I have to. But that will get me there early afternoon. According to GPS, I"m only 6 hours and 20 minutes away. It's never right so add 30 minutes plus 15 minutes to fuel and 15 more minutes for kicks because that's the way it works and I'm arriving at 1:20 pm, call it 1:30. Delivery is 6:00 am the next morning. That's a lot of time sitting in the truck. Not sure if I'll do that or find a cheap hotel.
I should be home no later than Friday sometime. I likely will get sent back out somewhere over the weekend. Which is fine, I need to rack up some miles an get some money. I'm hoping for a place to tell me I have to wait. That's where you rack up the money. Waiting for pay. It really adds to any trip if it's over 10 hours. A whole day even better. I'll make a heckuva lot more in 24 hours of waiting on detention pay than I can the hours I can legally drive in that same time period.
Anyway, it's time to go to sleep.
Started out this morning. Got to the plant at 6:30 am, got checked in a one place, weighed at another, loaded at yet another and back to the scale house. Where I waited....and waited...and waited.... for hours. Lots of conversations with other drivers during that time, even with a smart phone, it can get pretty boring.
After 2-1/2 hours, they finally called me up there. "Well, they kept doing sample checks, we couldn't let ya go without knowing the samples were going to be good". I guess they finally figured they are good. Ate up m clock tho. I was determined to get in 600 miles. I fell about 40 miles short of it. Drove, drove, drove. Forced to take a 30 minute break which is mostly what kept me from making the full 600.
Anyway, I gambled. I looked at a Love's well down the line and figured I had enough time to get there, get off the clock and get parked. About a 12 minute window, I figured, 12 minutes left on the clock before I absolutely had to get off of it. And stop the truck. The gamble wasn't just the time tho. Actually, the time is math, but you never know if an accident or road construction or steep hills or whatever are going to slow you down. No, nowadays, the gamble is: is there going to be a parking space available when I get there? Cause' honey, after 6:00 pm, you're taking a big chance that there isn't anything available.
When I pulled in here, I saw an "empty" spot, but it was between 2 trucks, next to the curb, basically where you drive through. However, driving through this rather large truck stop, there wasn't a single space available. The Pilot back down the road, I could see from the highway, it was full. I pulled back around hoping that empty spot between the two trucks was still there and walaah. I pulled in there, stopped the truck, got off the clock with 3 minutes to spare.
I saw the driving on the side of me that is - really far out there - and talked to him for a minute. He just laughed, I'm out of hours, I'm not going anywhere - notwithstanding the fact that his truck was in a position to make it very difficult for truck parked across from him to pull out. But, that's not my problem. I'm next to him but I am far enough back that if he moves in the morning before I can, no problem them getting out of there.
I have been sitting here watching dozens and dozens of trucks pulling in here and driving right back out. The problem with pushing the clock nowadays is the parking situation. You might have a place in mind, and it might be doable with the time you have available, but if you get there and there isn't any place to park, you're literally screwed. This is where paper logs saved us. You could still drive a little while down the road and find a place and simply mark it as if you had driven there.
I'm 430 miles from my destination. I was trying to make at least 400, but the plant did that in. Still, not bad, considering. I figure to get up at 6, do my pretrip, get to the fuel pump, fill it up, head out and hope to hit the plant before I have to take a 30 minute break. I mean, if I have to, I have to. But that will get me there early afternoon. According to GPS, I"m only 6 hours and 20 minutes away. It's never right so add 30 minutes plus 15 minutes to fuel and 15 more minutes for kicks because that's the way it works and I'm arriving at 1:20 pm, call it 1:30. Delivery is 6:00 am the next morning. That's a lot of time sitting in the truck. Not sure if I'll do that or find a cheap hotel.
I should be home no later than Friday sometime. I likely will get sent back out somewhere over the weekend. Which is fine, I need to rack up some miles an get some money. I'm hoping for a place to tell me I have to wait. That's where you rack up the money. Waiting for pay. It really adds to any trip if it's over 10 hours. A whole day even better. I'll make a heckuva lot more in 24 hours of waiting on detention pay than I can the hours I can legally drive in that same time period.
Anyway, it's time to go to sleep.
So, I made a huge error that would have really pissed me off - at me - tomorrow. I misread the text Ann sent me, I thought I had to load tomorrow. It turns out she has me loading Monday morning. I know this because another driver called me earlier. "Hi Ben, this is - " whoever, I don't know this dude, he works there but I haven't met more than half the drivers. She gave him my number, which is cool, but he confused me at first.
"Ann said you have a load on Monday and that you have stuff to get done around the house". Monday? I thought. "No, that load is going out tomorrow". He was confused then too, but apologetic for calling me about it. No, no, let me look at this again, I replied while switching screens on my phone to take another look. Yea, it's going out tomorrow. Wait, what is today? the 24th, he replies. Ohhhhh wow! I would have gone to the plant tomorrow for nothing!
I thought about it for 2 seconds. He said, well she said you had stuff to do and maybe you'd give up the load. He was being really nice about it, but he doesn't live here, he wasn't assigned a load for Monday cause he just got back into town and I can understand him trying. I've been on the road long enough, 3 straight days off, even if unpaid, sound wonderful to me. Yes, you can have it! Not that i want to give up a 736 mile each way run, but I want the time off. I have a large number of things I still have to get done that Monday would provide for. Tomorrow is Sunday and I actually have some stuff Sunday would allot for as well.
But actually, tomorrow sounds like the perfect day to lounge around and do nothing for an entire day, with no pressure to do anything. Tho, if it hadn't been raining so much, there is yard work I'd love to get done. In fact, at the very least, I will wash off the entire concrete slab tomorrow. Okay, sitting around doing nothing isn't going to happen. I just remembered a bunch of organizational stuff I need to get done before my friends move back here, plus need to drive around the community and see if there are any houses available that aren't listed anywhere and get some stuff from Lowe's . I wouldn't mind getting the truck and bringing it home and taking it to a place down the street on Monday that details cars. I'm sure they'll do whatever for extra fee.
__________________
Tomorrow is now today and almost over. I spent a considerable amount of time traveling around looking at bathroom vanities, attempting to decide which would be the best one for the amount of money I wanted to spend.
I mean, you can spent thousands on an entire setup if you really want to. I didn't really want to, lol. I finally ended up at a Home Depot some 40 miles away and found one of their vanity sets on sale that really looked cool, to me anyway and was at a great price for the cabinet, the top and a mirror. I saw a faucet set at Lowe's that I will go back to tomorrow to finish the deal. I'm half tempted to try and install it tomorrow. My friends are going to leave tomorrow morning to go over to same said town for doctor visits, I am going to go into that bathroom and see what it would take to remove the existing vanity and install the new one. If it's more than a day job, I can't do it. I'll have to pay someone to come over.
Because after tomorrow? I intend on taking whatever runs are dumped on me full the way up until the end of March. No complaining about it, the money is needed. But it has been nice having some time off, even if not paid time off. My old job, I had weekends off anyway and didn't get paid for them, in my mind, it's really just taking a single day off without pay, which would be tomorrow. It will show, of course, 2 paychecks from now, but the next paycheck should be mighty fine. So, I'm good with it.
Anyway, I also ended up building a fire in the pit outside - the temps came way down today, visited my friends at Chili's and basically enjoyed my Sunday. Oh, all 3 of us sat by the fire for several hours chatting. Social Club in the backyard, lol.
Never had time to finish this one. Posting anyway.
"Ann said you have a load on Monday and that you have stuff to get done around the house". Monday? I thought. "No, that load is going out tomorrow". He was confused then too, but apologetic for calling me about it. No, no, let me look at this again, I replied while switching screens on my phone to take another look. Yea, it's going out tomorrow. Wait, what is today? the 24th, he replies. Ohhhhh wow! I would have gone to the plant tomorrow for nothing!
I thought about it for 2 seconds. He said, well she said you had stuff to do and maybe you'd give up the load. He was being really nice about it, but he doesn't live here, he wasn't assigned a load for Monday cause he just got back into town and I can understand him trying. I've been on the road long enough, 3 straight days off, even if unpaid, sound wonderful to me. Yes, you can have it! Not that i want to give up a 736 mile each way run, but I want the time off. I have a large number of things I still have to get done that Monday would provide for. Tomorrow is Sunday and I actually have some stuff Sunday would allot for as well.
But actually, tomorrow sounds like the perfect day to lounge around and do nothing for an entire day, with no pressure to do anything. Tho, if it hadn't been raining so much, there is yard work I'd love to get done. In fact, at the very least, I will wash off the entire concrete slab tomorrow. Okay, sitting around doing nothing isn't going to happen. I just remembered a bunch of organizational stuff I need to get done before my friends move back here, plus need to drive around the community and see if there are any houses available that aren't listed anywhere and get some stuff from Lowe's . I wouldn't mind getting the truck and bringing it home and taking it to a place down the street on Monday that details cars. I'm sure they'll do whatever for extra fee.
__________________
Tomorrow is now today and almost over. I spent a considerable amount of time traveling around looking at bathroom vanities, attempting to decide which would be the best one for the amount of money I wanted to spend.
I mean, you can spent thousands on an entire setup if you really want to. I didn't really want to, lol. I finally ended up at a Home Depot some 40 miles away and found one of their vanity sets on sale that really looked cool, to me anyway and was at a great price for the cabinet, the top and a mirror. I saw a faucet set at Lowe's that I will go back to tomorrow to finish the deal. I'm half tempted to try and install it tomorrow. My friends are going to leave tomorrow morning to go over to same said town for doctor visits, I am going to go into that bathroom and see what it would take to remove the existing vanity and install the new one. If it's more than a day job, I can't do it. I'll have to pay someone to come over.
Because after tomorrow? I intend on taking whatever runs are dumped on me full the way up until the end of March. No complaining about it, the money is needed. But it has been nice having some time off, even if not paid time off. My old job, I had weekends off anyway and didn't get paid for them, in my mind, it's really just taking a single day off without pay, which would be tomorrow. It will show, of course, 2 paychecks from now, but the next paycheck should be mighty fine. So, I'm good with it.
Anyway, I also ended up building a fire in the pit outside - the temps came way down today, visited my friends at Chili's and basically enjoyed my Sunday. Oh, all 3 of us sat by the fire for several hours chatting. Social Club in the backyard, lol.
Never had time to finish this one. Posting anyway.
Saturday, February 24, 2018
So. I got home yesterday afternoon, I asked for the day off today. I didn't even hear back about it - I texted my manager - until I found it she had been in an accident. Everyone is fine, thank God, hydroplaning incident that set her pickup off the road and into a tree.
Off course here: Note to oneself: need ottoman or other such thing to kick feet up on when lounging in front of desktop. I'm not at an office, I don't need or want to be sitting alert and upright. This is kickback time. I got this new computer chair and it's very nice,, but my feet are still sitting on the floor. Correction to this problem coming soon : )
I didn't let loose on my manager today, but I did relieve myself a bit. She's really too nice a person to let off steam on too much, I would rather go to her manager if it ever came to that. She's really cool, trust me, nice lady. But, she has a job to perform and that means sending us out on endless runs. Nice and fine,, but I have to have home time. I've been out on 4 back to back runs. My roomies informed me of that today. That means, come back, spend a part of a day here and night and then back out the next morning. That's not home time, that's just coming home to sleep. Last weekend, I was home a total of 9 hours after being out 9 days. Before that, similar and before that, similar. \
I asked her for tomorrow off, too. This is what happens when you bust ass and just do whatever they want you to do. Experienced this all my life. They want to run you hard. Endless. Unless you stand up for yourself, they will continue to do so. Sometimes it's because the don't give a s*** about you, other times it's because they are dumped with more on their plate than they can realistically handle. She is dictated to by corporate. I understand where she's coming from, but at the same time, I have to have a life outside of a truck. I make my case, civilly and politely, but I never-the-less make that case.
I'm 54 years old. I still have a lot of stamina, but I see it's not as good as it used to be. I can still drive all day, but I'm awfully tired that night. And after a really brutal day, I have a hard time getting up the next morning. 14 hours. That's a long time being on duty. It happens 70% of the time, I'm guessing. More often than not, I'll definitively state.
My statement to her in texting was that I have been running for weeks now, I need more off time than this. These 2 other new guys? Getting a lot more off time than me, I know this from having conversations with them. Not about off time, but they bring it up and I wonder how they get away with it, considering the schedule I've been dealing with. Okay, I know: whine and complain. It's whatever, I don't like doing that with management. I've put up with a lot of bs in my lifetime, at least in this case it's putting up with bs from a nice person. Nice, but firm, when it comes time to get the deliveries done, lol.
She left it on hold. If someone shows up by tomorrow morning, I can let you have another day off. I just want a couple of days off in a row, not one day here and there. Most other drivers are getting that. Some get much more than that. Anyway, I''m bracing myself for a run tomorrow, I"m guessing I'll get dumped with it. It's to El Dorado, I think it's 3 hours or so away, can be a one day run if the loading plant and the unloading plant get it done efficiently. A day plus a ten hour break somewhere on the road, close to home but out of reach because of HOS hours if not plus whatever drive time left. Probably less than 50 miles.\
___________________________
Welp, got called to go out. That was yesterday. Of course it took over 6 hours for them to unload the truck. No clue why it takes them so long. It shouldn't take more than 2 to 2-1/2 hours at most. They make you unhook the tractor and drive off site while they are doing it. So, I drove the 10 miles to the nearest town with a restaurant. Went into a burger joint, this place had all kinds of seafood, including fresh trout. Uhh, yes, I'll have the trout please. Haven't had trout in ages, it was very tasty and reasonably priced. Decided to get a cup of gumbo to go for later on.
On the drive back, my manager calls. We desperately need that trailer for tomorrow morning, are you going to be able to get it back tonight? I dunno, depends on when they are finished. Well, can you start your 10 hour break and get up early? Didn't really like the question, I know when I get up that early, the day is fairly well ruined for me. I just drag butt all day long because I am tired. But, I agreed to do it. So, I got up at 3 am, drove straight back, got home, went back to bed. I feel a little better after sleeping for 2 more hours but I know my body and mind and how it works. I likely won't do anything today. Unless a wave of "fresh" hits me and some energy comes rolling in.
Tomorrow will mark the 4th Sunday in a row that I have had to get up, go to work, get a truck and roll into the plant. I didn't get my two straight days off. I'm going to let that go and pretty much tell her that I have to have 3 days off for the move coming up at the beginning of April. I'm not moving but I am obviously going to help move one household out and another back in. We'll see how that turns out, but the request is going in Monday, Very well far in advance.
Anyway, another trip to Illinois. A different plant, but not that far away from the one I was at this week.
I gotta say here, I don't foresee myself doing this job forever. Maybe a couple of years, get my tanker experience with hazmat in and then find something local. My company has local gigs, if I keep my nose clean and encounter no major self-caused problems, I should be able to transfer. I don't mind going out for two days, but anything longer than that I just don't like it. This next trip is 3 days minimum. The pay is awesome, that's the only thing that's kept me up until now.
But this lie about new trucks doesn't go away. And now, my manager, who is trying really hard to keep all of us but is powerless about new trucks - she doesn't make those decisions - said there is a Mack truck in a shop somewhere, getting fixed that they are bringing up. She wants me to get in it and see if it's something I'd rather be in than this pile of junk I am currently driving. It's not new. I'm not holding my breath, but maybe it will be better than this thing. When asked about new trucks, she deflected off that to the Mack truck. Obviously, there aren't going to be any new trucks. This isn't the first time a trucking company has lied about new trucks - but those companies I'm not working for, either.
I really just want a daycab, local job, home every night or day, probably home during the day and out at night since when you first start you get the night shift.
I dunno. Maybe over time these ridiculous time slots I'm being put in and days will be mitigated. Like, new drivers get the crap that no one else wants. She gives us the runs to make the money - along with the runs that don't make hardly anything such as this run I just got done doing, but she does that to everyone. The runs, that is, not the time slots and days you have to go out. Some drivers don't care, I get that. They live on the road, they don't have a home here near where the plant is. But that's their choice, I don't live my life under the scope of what other people decide to do with theirs. For now, I will eat this and get these big paychecks and force myself to be happy with it.
And, if I stick around awhile, I will give serious thought to getting my own truck and leasing it out to the company. There are a couple of guys doing it, one of which is very happy with the setup - but he darn near lives in that truck. I mean, he almost never goes home. It works well for him because he has ladies all over the place plus his - wife at home. Note I didn't say I condone such things, that's just what he does. He find ladies everywhere he goes. Another driver that was stuck down in Brownsville - who claims to be a preacher - also talked long and loud about his lady liasons he has all over the place, including 2 of them he found down there.
He is also married. I don't get that. I can't really get into that perspective because when I was married, I didn't even think about other women. It's a commitment that you make to her to love her and stay monogamous. That 6th sense that women have about such things, I don't wonder if they suspect or even know their men are out there doing such things.
Anyway, I've pretty much wasted the morning. I am trying to get the motivation up to get over to Lowe's and see about getting a new vanity for the bedroom I will be moving into. The sink in that bathroom is absolutely disgusting. And also some grass seed for the back yard. I wish I would have thought of that last week, I could have thrown a big bag of that seed out and by now, it would have started up. It's been raining constantly all the way up until today.
Looking at the forecast, tho, I could still do it. It's going to be raining on and off this coming week, which is enough to keep grass seed wet enough to sprout. That alone may motivate me to spend at least an hour out of here. But the rest of the day? Forget about it. I'm toast.
Off course here: Note to oneself: need ottoman or other such thing to kick feet up on when lounging in front of desktop. I'm not at an office, I don't need or want to be sitting alert and upright. This is kickback time. I got this new computer chair and it's very nice,, but my feet are still sitting on the floor. Correction to this problem coming soon : )
I didn't let loose on my manager today, but I did relieve myself a bit. She's really too nice a person to let off steam on too much, I would rather go to her manager if it ever came to that. She's really cool, trust me, nice lady. But, she has a job to perform and that means sending us out on endless runs. Nice and fine,, but I have to have home time. I've been out on 4 back to back runs. My roomies informed me of that today. That means, come back, spend a part of a day here and night and then back out the next morning. That's not home time, that's just coming home to sleep. Last weekend, I was home a total of 9 hours after being out 9 days. Before that, similar and before that, similar. \
I asked her for tomorrow off, too. This is what happens when you bust ass and just do whatever they want you to do. Experienced this all my life. They want to run you hard. Endless. Unless you stand up for yourself, they will continue to do so. Sometimes it's because the don't give a s*** about you, other times it's because they are dumped with more on their plate than they can realistically handle. She is dictated to by corporate. I understand where she's coming from, but at the same time, I have to have a life outside of a truck. I make my case, civilly and politely, but I never-the-less make that case.
I'm 54 years old. I still have a lot of stamina, but I see it's not as good as it used to be. I can still drive all day, but I'm awfully tired that night. And after a really brutal day, I have a hard time getting up the next morning. 14 hours. That's a long time being on duty. It happens 70% of the time, I'm guessing. More often than not, I'll definitively state.
My statement to her in texting was that I have been running for weeks now, I need more off time than this. These 2 other new guys? Getting a lot more off time than me, I know this from having conversations with them. Not about off time, but they bring it up and I wonder how they get away with it, considering the schedule I've been dealing with. Okay, I know: whine and complain. It's whatever, I don't like doing that with management. I've put up with a lot of bs in my lifetime, at least in this case it's putting up with bs from a nice person. Nice, but firm, when it comes time to get the deliveries done, lol.
She left it on hold. If someone shows up by tomorrow morning, I can let you have another day off. I just want a couple of days off in a row, not one day here and there. Most other drivers are getting that. Some get much more than that. Anyway, I''m bracing myself for a run tomorrow, I"m guessing I'll get dumped with it. It's to El Dorado, I think it's 3 hours or so away, can be a one day run if the loading plant and the unloading plant get it done efficiently. A day plus a ten hour break somewhere on the road, close to home but out of reach because of HOS hours if not plus whatever drive time left. Probably less than 50 miles.\
___________________________
Welp, got called to go out. That was yesterday. Of course it took over 6 hours for them to unload the truck. No clue why it takes them so long. It shouldn't take more than 2 to 2-1/2 hours at most. They make you unhook the tractor and drive off site while they are doing it. So, I drove the 10 miles to the nearest town with a restaurant. Went into a burger joint, this place had all kinds of seafood, including fresh trout. Uhh, yes, I'll have the trout please. Haven't had trout in ages, it was very tasty and reasonably priced. Decided to get a cup of gumbo to go for later on.
On the drive back, my manager calls. We desperately need that trailer for tomorrow morning, are you going to be able to get it back tonight? I dunno, depends on when they are finished. Well, can you start your 10 hour break and get up early? Didn't really like the question, I know when I get up that early, the day is fairly well ruined for me. I just drag butt all day long because I am tired. But, I agreed to do it. So, I got up at 3 am, drove straight back, got home, went back to bed. I feel a little better after sleeping for 2 more hours but I know my body and mind and how it works. I likely won't do anything today. Unless a wave of "fresh" hits me and some energy comes rolling in.
Tomorrow will mark the 4th Sunday in a row that I have had to get up, go to work, get a truck and roll into the plant. I didn't get my two straight days off. I'm going to let that go and pretty much tell her that I have to have 3 days off for the move coming up at the beginning of April. I'm not moving but I am obviously going to help move one household out and another back in. We'll see how that turns out, but the request is going in Monday, Very well far in advance.
Anyway, another trip to Illinois. A different plant, but not that far away from the one I was at this week.
I gotta say here, I don't foresee myself doing this job forever. Maybe a couple of years, get my tanker experience with hazmat in and then find something local. My company has local gigs, if I keep my nose clean and encounter no major self-caused problems, I should be able to transfer. I don't mind going out for two days, but anything longer than that I just don't like it. This next trip is 3 days minimum. The pay is awesome, that's the only thing that's kept me up until now.
But this lie about new trucks doesn't go away. And now, my manager, who is trying really hard to keep all of us but is powerless about new trucks - she doesn't make those decisions - said there is a Mack truck in a shop somewhere, getting fixed that they are bringing up. She wants me to get in it and see if it's something I'd rather be in than this pile of junk I am currently driving. It's not new. I'm not holding my breath, but maybe it will be better than this thing. When asked about new trucks, she deflected off that to the Mack truck. Obviously, there aren't going to be any new trucks. This isn't the first time a trucking company has lied about new trucks - but those companies I'm not working for, either.
I really just want a daycab, local job, home every night or day, probably home during the day and out at night since when you first start you get the night shift.
I dunno. Maybe over time these ridiculous time slots I'm being put in and days will be mitigated. Like, new drivers get the crap that no one else wants. She gives us the runs to make the money - along with the runs that don't make hardly anything such as this run I just got done doing, but she does that to everyone. The runs, that is, not the time slots and days you have to go out. Some drivers don't care, I get that. They live on the road, they don't have a home here near where the plant is. But that's their choice, I don't live my life under the scope of what other people decide to do with theirs. For now, I will eat this and get these big paychecks and force myself to be happy with it.
And, if I stick around awhile, I will give serious thought to getting my own truck and leasing it out to the company. There are a couple of guys doing it, one of which is very happy with the setup - but he darn near lives in that truck. I mean, he almost never goes home. It works well for him because he has ladies all over the place plus his - wife at home. Note I didn't say I condone such things, that's just what he does. He find ladies everywhere he goes. Another driver that was stuck down in Brownsville - who claims to be a preacher - also talked long and loud about his lady liasons he has all over the place, including 2 of them he found down there.
He is also married. I don't get that. I can't really get into that perspective because when I was married, I didn't even think about other women. It's a commitment that you make to her to love her and stay monogamous. That 6th sense that women have about such things, I don't wonder if they suspect or even know their men are out there doing such things.
Anyway, I've pretty much wasted the morning. I am trying to get the motivation up to get over to Lowe's and see about getting a new vanity for the bedroom I will be moving into. The sink in that bathroom is absolutely disgusting. And also some grass seed for the back yard. I wish I would have thought of that last week, I could have thrown a big bag of that seed out and by now, it would have started up. It's been raining constantly all the way up until today.
Looking at the forecast, tho, I could still do it. It's going to be raining on and off this coming week, which is enough to keep grass seed wet enough to sprout. That alone may motivate me to spend at least an hour out of here. But the rest of the day? Forget about it. I'm toast.
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
Finally Home
After 4 days, I'm finally home from this trip.
A lot of thoughts going through my head.
About this job, that is. Politics and current news is another big thing that I focus on.
I was talking with the lady that also went up to Pennsylvania a while back, she was wondering why I don't just get my own truck and lease it out to them? I have never owned my own truck. I have heard good and bad about it. I will think about it for a while, check into it, look at info on the trucker's boards about it and make a decision.
Meanwhile, my company actually pays for breakdown pay. That's $22 per hour for every hour from the time the truck breaks down until the time you get in it to drive it again. I didn't know that until yesterday. That sheds a bit different light on all of these breakdowns. But I can tell ya, being stuck on the side of the road isn't fun, at all. And driving a truck that you don't know when it might break down again? Pretty much sucks. I drove that thing all the way back yesterday and today wondering if the thing was going to give up the ghost yet again.
I had given a little thought to owning my own truck after spending an afternoon stuck with another driver from the company at a plant who was in his own truck. He makes a lot of money - but he's out on the road a lot more than I want to be. But, I have been out on the road as much as anyone there in the last several weeks. Well, nothing I'm going to jump on. I'll take my time and look into it.
There are a couple of pressing things, at least for me, tho that I need to deal with. I can't be eating this road food all the time. It's just ballooning me. You see fat truck drivers? It's cause they don't get exercise and they are eating the food you get at truckstops. Think Arby's, Wendy's, Carl's Junior, McDonald's, etc. Subway is the only "good" thing out there.
I can load a refrigerator up with healthier food. Yogurt, zero percent fat milk, lunch meats and bread. Left overs if I figure out a way to shove a microwave in that truck. Or even eating cold leftovers never really bothered me. Especially when it's right there. I dread the instances where I have to choose food from a truckstop. I opt for these bread and meat and cheese pre made sandwiches. At least they aren't laden with fat and grease. But, yeah, I need a refrigerator in there and since I can't put the kind I want in there, I'm going to have to buy the cooler type.
You know, an ice chest you take on camping trips? Except these have a refrigeration unit. I've been looking at them. The better ones are kinda pricey, but they keep the food colder and they are iceless. I'm still on the fence about all of this, but I need to make changes for my health's sake pretty quick. I'd also like a truck version of a coffee maker. Tho I really don't mind paying for coffee at a truckstop, it's hit and miss. Some places have excellent coffee, some places have really disgusting coffee that is gross. Some places don't change out the coffee if it gets old and even if it was good when it was first made, it turned disgusting over time.
But see, this truck. It keeps breaking down. Are they going to see the reality of this situation and get me a decent running truck? Or keep me stuck in this thing. Cause this is kind of a custom deal, you buy stuff that is specific for the truck you want it in.
_________
Okay. I just talked to the only lady driver in our division. Apparently our manager got into a car accident today. It's been raining for days now. Her pickup hydroplaned, the rear end of it lost traction, spun around, slid of the road and slammed into a tree, replete with kids present in the vehicle. Luckily, no one was hurt.
Whatever the case, I'm tired, a bit burnt out, and I have a lot I want to try and get done tomorrow. Time for sleep on my brand new bed : )
A lot of thoughts going through my head.
About this job, that is. Politics and current news is another big thing that I focus on.
I was talking with the lady that also went up to Pennsylvania a while back, she was wondering why I don't just get my own truck and lease it out to them? I have never owned my own truck. I have heard good and bad about it. I will think about it for a while, check into it, look at info on the trucker's boards about it and make a decision.
Meanwhile, my company actually pays for breakdown pay. That's $22 per hour for every hour from the time the truck breaks down until the time you get in it to drive it again. I didn't know that until yesterday. That sheds a bit different light on all of these breakdowns. But I can tell ya, being stuck on the side of the road isn't fun, at all. And driving a truck that you don't know when it might break down again? Pretty much sucks. I drove that thing all the way back yesterday and today wondering if the thing was going to give up the ghost yet again.
I had given a little thought to owning my own truck after spending an afternoon stuck with another driver from the company at a plant who was in his own truck. He makes a lot of money - but he's out on the road a lot more than I want to be. But, I have been out on the road as much as anyone there in the last several weeks. Well, nothing I'm going to jump on. I'll take my time and look into it.
There are a couple of pressing things, at least for me, tho that I need to deal with. I can't be eating this road food all the time. It's just ballooning me. You see fat truck drivers? It's cause they don't get exercise and they are eating the food you get at truckstops. Think Arby's, Wendy's, Carl's Junior, McDonald's, etc. Subway is the only "good" thing out there.
I can load a refrigerator up with healthier food. Yogurt, zero percent fat milk, lunch meats and bread. Left overs if I figure out a way to shove a microwave in that truck. Or even eating cold leftovers never really bothered me. Especially when it's right there. I dread the instances where I have to choose food from a truckstop. I opt for these bread and meat and cheese pre made sandwiches. At least they aren't laden with fat and grease. But, yeah, I need a refrigerator in there and since I can't put the kind I want in there, I'm going to have to buy the cooler type.
You know, an ice chest you take on camping trips? Except these have a refrigeration unit. I've been looking at them. The better ones are kinda pricey, but they keep the food colder and they are iceless. I'm still on the fence about all of this, but I need to make changes for my health's sake pretty quick. I'd also like a truck version of a coffee maker. Tho I really don't mind paying for coffee at a truckstop, it's hit and miss. Some places have excellent coffee, some places have really disgusting coffee that is gross. Some places don't change out the coffee if it gets old and even if it was good when it was first made, it turned disgusting over time.
But see, this truck. It keeps breaking down. Are they going to see the reality of this situation and get me a decent running truck? Or keep me stuck in this thing. Cause this is kind of a custom deal, you buy stuff that is specific for the truck you want it in.
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Okay. I just talked to the only lady driver in our division. Apparently our manager got into a car accident today. It's been raining for days now. Her pickup hydroplaned, the rear end of it lost traction, spun around, slid of the road and slammed into a tree, replete with kids present in the vehicle. Luckily, no one was hurt.
Whatever the case, I'm tired, a bit burnt out, and I have a lot I want to try and get done tomorrow. Time for sleep on my brand new bed : )
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
I feel better if nothing else. Went over to Applebee's - walking the pouring rain, I was soaked by the time I got there - and had some dinner. No particular rush, I figured the shop will call in it's own due time and I am quite certain the plant won't be calling before tomorrow. Not this late in the day. I don't really care if they keep me here for a week. $22 x 24 hour a day x however many days. Well, it would be how many hours total but you get the message.
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Okay, that was yesterday - Monday. Now. we're at Tuesday. I've been out on the road, a lot. I'd really like to start heading home. And really like to have at least a full day at home before going back out again. Actually, I could sit here a few more days and get paid for it, that's not a problem. I just want a day at home, at least, when I get back. Something tells me that's not going to happen.
Meanwhile, the wait goes on. The truck isn't fixed - yet tho according to them it should be no later than the end of the morning. I need that truck to be here and waiting in the parking lot so that when they call me to go unload that trailer, I can boogie right out the door, fire that thing up and head straight over there. That is, if that even occurs today. Kind of thing up in the air here. But even if they called in the next hour I would still probably wait. Check out time here is 11:00 am and I really don't think, from what they told me at the plant yesterday, that they are going to be ready to do anything this morning. I might as well enjoy the hotel room as long as I can.
Just trying to make some plans for today. Cause after 11, go get the truck if it's ready, then I can head over to Walmart and buy some cleaning supplies. Really need to scrub this thing out. They are hell bent on me staying in it, its going to look and smell clean inside at the very least.
Well, that changed quickly. Just got a call from the plant, come in about an hour to 2 hours from now, the man calibrating the tank wants to do it while the truck is being unloaded. That changes my whole day, even my entire perspective on the day. Now, I need to call the shop. They had the part, they just needed to install it.
Wringing my hands. Ok. They are going to be done with the truck by 10 am, they hope. I have to be out of this hotel by 11 am anyway, so I figure to get an Uber ride back to the shop and hope they are just about done by the time I get there, leave here around 9:30 am. Maybe a little earlier, actually. I don't want to start the clock too early. The Hours of Service clock, that is. The more I have available after I get out of that plant, the more I will have to get a good chunk of driving to get home out of the way today.
Well that's that. Maybe, lol. Nothing is ever set in stone around here until it actually happens. The truck might not be done, the plant may change it's mind, who knows.
Anyway, I need to get my stuff ready to go.
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Okay, that was yesterday - Monday. Now. we're at Tuesday. I've been out on the road, a lot. I'd really like to start heading home. And really like to have at least a full day at home before going back out again. Actually, I could sit here a few more days and get paid for it, that's not a problem. I just want a day at home, at least, when I get back. Something tells me that's not going to happen.
Meanwhile, the wait goes on. The truck isn't fixed - yet tho according to them it should be no later than the end of the morning. I need that truck to be here and waiting in the parking lot so that when they call me to go unload that trailer, I can boogie right out the door, fire that thing up and head straight over there. That is, if that even occurs today. Kind of thing up in the air here. But even if they called in the next hour I would still probably wait. Check out time here is 11:00 am and I really don't think, from what they told me at the plant yesterday, that they are going to be ready to do anything this morning. I might as well enjoy the hotel room as long as I can.
Just trying to make some plans for today. Cause after 11, go get the truck if it's ready, then I can head over to Walmart and buy some cleaning supplies. Really need to scrub this thing out. They are hell bent on me staying in it, its going to look and smell clean inside at the very least.
Well, that changed quickly. Just got a call from the plant, come in about an hour to 2 hours from now, the man calibrating the tank wants to do it while the truck is being unloaded. That changes my whole day, even my entire perspective on the day. Now, I need to call the shop. They had the part, they just needed to install it.
Wringing my hands. Ok. They are going to be done with the truck by 10 am, they hope. I have to be out of this hotel by 11 am anyway, so I figure to get an Uber ride back to the shop and hope they are just about done by the time I get there, leave here around 9:30 am. Maybe a little earlier, actually. I don't want to start the clock too early. The Hours of Service clock, that is. The more I have available after I get out of that plant, the more I will have to get a good chunk of driving to get home out of the way today.
Well that's that. Maybe, lol. Nothing is ever set in stone around here until it actually happens. The truck might not be done, the plant may change it's mind, who knows.
Anyway, I need to get my stuff ready to go.
Monday, February 19, 2018
Well that was fun. Got up early, go up here to near Chicago, got into the plant, the plant operator walks up and says: Well, go get a hotel. Huh? Why? My mind was filled with "get this thing unloaded, get as many miles back as I can get in with available that's left". Not, gee, I think I'll sit up here for 2 or 3 days doing nothing. Well, grin and eat it. I dropped the trailer there - they said they would monitor the pressure on it - started to drive out of the plant and the transmission on the truck started failing.
Yup, third break down in this same truck. I sat there for a while trying to figure if I was doing something wrong, but after watching a few youtube videos on this particular transmission, I came to the conclusion that I was doing everything perfectly, as I had been since before I got up here. I finally called my manager, after fooling with it for a while. I was able to get it to go into manual mode, but only up to 5th gear. And reverse. So, this dude calls me from wherever from within the company, trying turning the battery switch off for 15 and see what happens.
Tried, no go. He said he would call a tow truck but had to go pick up another guy with broke down truck somewhere. Uhh, ok. Off the phone, I tried turn the thing off again and leaving it like that for 30 minutes. Back on, no go. Tried running it in reverse and forward in the manual mode but nothing. I would go above 5th gear and it wouldn't manually switch gears while it was moving. So I parked the freaking thing. Had it in neutral and the parking brake on. Sitting there playing on the phone, the damned thing went into gear on it's own, in neutral and the whole truck started tilting sideways. A foul odor came up into the truck, I turned the truck off. Turned it back on, and then off again, etc.
Then, magically, after an hour of this, the thing started working normally again. So, I called this dude back up, told him the stupid thing went into gear on it's own. I end up taking the thing to a shop, A Volvo dealer who didn't want to look at it because they are booked up til Thursday. This guy tells them our company has a contract and they have to at least do a check on it.
So, the trailer is sitting at a plant until sometime tomorrow - at the earliest they said, there was no guarantee they would even be able to unload it tomorrow - and the truck is sitting at the shop for unknown length of time and unknown issue. Electrical, sensors, the shifter? No clue.
My manager got me a hotel room at Holiday Inn. I drove that truck to the shop, took an uber over here and playing the waiting game now. Though, I admittedly got into bed and got a long nap. I'm worn out. This job is really pushing me to the limits. Long hours, long days. The first load - the earliest load of the day - is killer. That forces me to get up at 3:15 to 3:30 am, depending on whether I want to put on coffee or just blow it off and get coffee on the road and be at the plant by 5 am. The rest of the day after that is a fight to stay awake.
Trucks breaking down like this, though? Really just drains me. I just hate it. There is nothing like about a broken down truck except the fact that I am getting break down pay and I am at a hotel for free, and, I am getting paid separately an hourly wage for about 30 hours (minimum) to wait for them to get the plant up and operating again so they can take the delivery. That literally could be days. I mean, it could be tomorrow, but I've seen these plants shut down for a week and longer. I have no idea what my company would do then. The contract forces the customer to pay for detention pay if the wait is their fault, which in this case, it definitely is.
Well the plant isn't broken down, they just decided that they needed to recalibrate a half million gallon tank that the stuff in my truck goes into. They have to empty that entire tank and then what they do after that I have no idea. Apparently it's emptying the tank that is time consuming. A process I literally know nothing about, I just asked the plant operator a few questions about it, simply because I like to find out about things lol, not because I need to know.
Geeze that nap made me even worse off. I'm sooo tired. It's a bad idea to take another nap this time of day. I'll just force myself to stay awake until around 9 pm and then I'll crash for the night. Several decent restaurants within walking distance.
Well, anyway, that's my current dilemma.
Yup, third break down in this same truck. I sat there for a while trying to figure if I was doing something wrong, but after watching a few youtube videos on this particular transmission, I came to the conclusion that I was doing everything perfectly, as I had been since before I got up here. I finally called my manager, after fooling with it for a while. I was able to get it to go into manual mode, but only up to 5th gear. And reverse. So, this dude calls me from wherever from within the company, trying turning the battery switch off for 15 and see what happens.
Tried, no go. He said he would call a tow truck but had to go pick up another guy with broke down truck somewhere. Uhh, ok. Off the phone, I tried turn the thing off again and leaving it like that for 30 minutes. Back on, no go. Tried running it in reverse and forward in the manual mode but nothing. I would go above 5th gear and it wouldn't manually switch gears while it was moving. So I parked the freaking thing. Had it in neutral and the parking brake on. Sitting there playing on the phone, the damned thing went into gear on it's own, in neutral and the whole truck started tilting sideways. A foul odor came up into the truck, I turned the truck off. Turned it back on, and then off again, etc.
Then, magically, after an hour of this, the thing started working normally again. So, I called this dude back up, told him the stupid thing went into gear on it's own. I end up taking the thing to a shop, A Volvo dealer who didn't want to look at it because they are booked up til Thursday. This guy tells them our company has a contract and they have to at least do a check on it.
So, the trailer is sitting at a plant until sometime tomorrow - at the earliest they said, there was no guarantee they would even be able to unload it tomorrow - and the truck is sitting at the shop for unknown length of time and unknown issue. Electrical, sensors, the shifter? No clue.
My manager got me a hotel room at Holiday Inn. I drove that truck to the shop, took an uber over here and playing the waiting game now. Though, I admittedly got into bed and got a long nap. I'm worn out. This job is really pushing me to the limits. Long hours, long days. The first load - the earliest load of the day - is killer. That forces me to get up at 3:15 to 3:30 am, depending on whether I want to put on coffee or just blow it off and get coffee on the road and be at the plant by 5 am. The rest of the day after that is a fight to stay awake.
Trucks breaking down like this, though? Really just drains me. I just hate it. There is nothing like about a broken down truck except the fact that I am getting break down pay and I am at a hotel for free, and, I am getting paid separately an hourly wage for about 30 hours (minimum) to wait for them to get the plant up and operating again so they can take the delivery. That literally could be days. I mean, it could be tomorrow, but I've seen these plants shut down for a week and longer. I have no idea what my company would do then. The contract forces the customer to pay for detention pay if the wait is their fault, which in this case, it definitely is.
Well the plant isn't broken down, they just decided that they needed to recalibrate a half million gallon tank that the stuff in my truck goes into. They have to empty that entire tank and then what they do after that I have no idea. Apparently it's emptying the tank that is time consuming. A process I literally know nothing about, I just asked the plant operator a few questions about it, simply because I like to find out about things lol, not because I need to know.
Geeze that nap made me even worse off. I'm sooo tired. It's a bad idea to take another nap this time of day. I'll just force myself to stay awake until around 9 pm and then I'll crash for the night. Several decent restaurants within walking distance.
Well, anyway, that's my current dilemma.
Sunday, February 18, 2018
I made it to a TA truckstop north of St. Louis. 632 miles driven today and damned tired. That alarm went off this morning at 3:25 am and I was not liking it. I dragged my butt out of bed, got in the shower, got dressed, said bye to my dogs and left. I was sooo tired, I tried to sleep at the driver's room at the plant, but it's just not a place for sleeping. I did finally doze off just before the dude came in and handed me the keys to my truck - lots of safety precautions here, including having to give them the keys to your truck before they will load it - and off I went.
I kept thinking, I am going to stop and sleep for 30 minutes. Another part of my brain: you do that and you'll have a lot of make up driving to do tomorrow morning. I fought sleep for 5 hours until my mandatory 30 minute break came up. I went straight to the sleeper, set the alarm at 28 minutes and fell asleep. That thing went off, I popped up, got my shoes back on, drove until I was out of hours. I mean, within 15 minutes of having to shut down.
I figured if I did that, I would be able to get a full 8 hours of sleep and still have time to get dinner, fuel up the truck and hang out for a while on the internet. And yes, I got my laptop out and that's what's putting up this post.
Tho, I didn't know this TA was here. I was going to go to Love's, another 20 miles up the road, but when I saw this place, I immediately exited. I wanted to eat a real dinner, not some junk from McDonald's or whatever. Love's has a good thing going - except - for what it chooses to put in for food. Many truck drivers want a real restaurant after 14 hours of work, not fast food junk.
Anyway, even at 632 miles driven today, I'm still 2-1/2 hours away from the plant and have to be there no later than 9am. So, another early day tomorrow, but not near as early as today. I really do not like this first loads. I tried to get it changed to a later load time, but no go on that one.
Lots of other stuff going on, but I think I'm going to go to sleep earlier than I first decided to.
I kept thinking, I am going to stop and sleep for 30 minutes. Another part of my brain: you do that and you'll have a lot of make up driving to do tomorrow morning. I fought sleep for 5 hours until my mandatory 30 minute break came up. I went straight to the sleeper, set the alarm at 28 minutes and fell asleep. That thing went off, I popped up, got my shoes back on, drove until I was out of hours. I mean, within 15 minutes of having to shut down.
I figured if I did that, I would be able to get a full 8 hours of sleep and still have time to get dinner, fuel up the truck and hang out for a while on the internet. And yes, I got my laptop out and that's what's putting up this post.
Tho, I didn't know this TA was here. I was going to go to Love's, another 20 miles up the road, but when I saw this place, I immediately exited. I wanted to eat a real dinner, not some junk from McDonald's or whatever. Love's has a good thing going - except - for what it chooses to put in for food. Many truck drivers want a real restaurant after 14 hours of work, not fast food junk.
Anyway, even at 632 miles driven today, I'm still 2-1/2 hours away from the plant and have to be there no later than 9am. So, another early day tomorrow, but not near as early as today. I really do not like this first loads. I tried to get it changed to a later load time, but no go on that one.
Lots of other stuff going on, but I think I'm going to go to sleep earlier than I first decided to.
Saturday, February 17, 2018
So, I drove all day long, got back to the yard, unooked the truck, hooked back up to another trailer, went home. Started laundry, ate dinner, contemplated having to go right back out at 3:45 am to get loaded and drive to a place just short of Chicago. And have to be there by the next morning at 8 am. I get a 14 hour work day with 11 allowable hours of driving. At 65 mph, I can drive 715 miles.
That's at a continuous 65 mph. No allowance for slower speed limits, stop lights, etc. The place is 750 miles from here. I'm to load tomorrow morning at 5 am, it takes minimum 2 hours to load and that's if there aren't any issues and then drive clear there? Okay. If I get on the HOS clock at 4:30, am I can be on duty until 6:30 pm.
I just have no idea how that is going to work out. Manager says most guys say they make it there by 9 am.
It's going to be a long day tomorrow, I can say that for a fact.
But the problem is worse with this company. They really don't seem to have a clue what they are doing. In some areas, yes, but in many others, no. If you know you need more drivers, then get more drivers. If you know you need more trucks to accommodate for that, then get more trucks. I really don't get all of this. I have great paychecks, that's what's keeping me there, so far.
Well that's my scenario tomorrow. Get the truck loaded and drive as many miles as I can before the HOS clock runs out. Take the mandatory 10 hour break and finish the trip - probably starting around 4 am - and try to get there on time.
I'm tired. Bedtime.
That's at a continuous 65 mph. No allowance for slower speed limits, stop lights, etc. The place is 750 miles from here. I'm to load tomorrow morning at 5 am, it takes minimum 2 hours to load and that's if there aren't any issues and then drive clear there? Okay. If I get on the HOS clock at 4:30, am I can be on duty until 6:30 pm.
I just have no idea how that is going to work out. Manager says most guys say they make it there by 9 am.
It's going to be a long day tomorrow, I can say that for a fact.
But the problem is worse with this company. They really don't seem to have a clue what they are doing. In some areas, yes, but in many others, no. If you know you need more drivers, then get more drivers. If you know you need more trucks to accommodate for that, then get more trucks. I really don't get all of this. I have great paychecks, that's what's keeping me there, so far.
Well that's my scenario tomorrow. Get the truck loaded and drive as many miles as I can before the HOS clock runs out. Take the mandatory 10 hour break and finish the trip - probably starting around 4 am - and try to get there on time.
I'm tired. Bedtime.
Friday, February 16, 2018
So...my manager calls me. I had just put my laptop on top of the dashboard - I was getting bored and I didn't want to sit in that sleeper - got a movie up, decided to watch Tombstone. She's going off on this company that can't have our trailers up there on time. She said the list she has shows there are 3 of them sitting at the border waiting to be brought up.
I just now thought: why don't we just go get them? I have a passport, if necessary. So do a few other drivers. Probably cost some time, but I can't imagine it costing 2 or 3 days as other drivers I have spoken with have complained about. Tho, I doubt they were complaining about it on their paychecks. 72 hours being paid to do nothing? Getting bored? I can find things to do. I got out of the truck, did a bunch of walking around in that yard in huge circles. I'm going to have to get some dumb bells to put in the cargo bay. I would really like to do at least a minimal work out since I am not longer getting the iron pumping I was getting at my Ferguson job.
But can you imagine being paid an hourly wage to do whatever you please? I mean, my manager told me today - I was asking questions about being down here because I had heard conflicting stories - that I could go get something to eat and just send the Uber bill to the company. Oh yea. I figured that, but wanted clarification. Actually, I wanted clarification on the pay for the entire time you are there. Cause I had heard 2 completely different stories from 2 drivers.
One said, you are not being paid for your 10 hour rest break. Another said, you only have that done if you go to a hotel (which is company paid). I thought, I could go to a hotel of my choosing, not have the company pay for it or even know about it (nothing wrong with that btw) and get my hourly pay for those 10 hours and come out WELL ahead. 3 of those 10 hours would pay for a decent hotel, I could stay at a Marriot for the 10 hours worth. Well not around here. There are Marriot's here but not that kind of money.
I just don't get people that don't think things through. I would rather stay at a hotel via company pay after I've been here long enough and not get anything. Or, do the other thing and get a room on my dime and still make out within the 10 hour rule. Today? I opted for them to pay for the room. I was done with that place and I had finally gotten word: driver will be here in 2 hours. Will whoop dee doo. If I lose a couple hours of detention pay, I'm not going to lose sleep over it after sitting in this dirt, barren parking lot with nothing within walking distance for almost 22 hours.
I'm not really used to this kind of company. I'll give the older drivers credit for the company being forced to pay for things that other companies wouldn't even think of. I don't want to ruin it for them, which was another factor in my taking a company paid hotel. But, plenty of drivers don't do that, they'll take the pay and sit at that lot for days. But, they complain about it. Why not just pay for your own hotel and they don't even have to know about it? Just curious.
Anyway, it's almost bed time. Tomorrow will be driving all day, get home tomorrow night, spend the night at the house and then get up early, I am assuming, to get another load and off to who knows where. She wanted me to go to PA again, but since I couldn't get out of here, she has something "else" for me in mind, of the which I don't know. I would have gladly taken PA. Nice long, high paying run. She gets me the miles, tho. She mixes it up with short and long runs.
Anyway, I think it time to be off to bed.
I just now thought: why don't we just go get them? I have a passport, if necessary. So do a few other drivers. Probably cost some time, but I can't imagine it costing 2 or 3 days as other drivers I have spoken with have complained about. Tho, I doubt they were complaining about it on their paychecks. 72 hours being paid to do nothing? Getting bored? I can find things to do. I got out of the truck, did a bunch of walking around in that yard in huge circles. I'm going to have to get some dumb bells to put in the cargo bay. I would really like to do at least a minimal work out since I am not longer getting the iron pumping I was getting at my Ferguson job.
But can you imagine being paid an hourly wage to do whatever you please? I mean, my manager told me today - I was asking questions about being down here because I had heard conflicting stories - that I could go get something to eat and just send the Uber bill to the company. Oh yea. I figured that, but wanted clarification. Actually, I wanted clarification on the pay for the entire time you are there. Cause I had heard 2 completely different stories from 2 drivers.
One said, you are not being paid for your 10 hour rest break. Another said, you only have that done if you go to a hotel (which is company paid). I thought, I could go to a hotel of my choosing, not have the company pay for it or even know about it (nothing wrong with that btw) and get my hourly pay for those 10 hours and come out WELL ahead. 3 of those 10 hours would pay for a decent hotel, I could stay at a Marriot for the 10 hours worth. Well not around here. There are Marriot's here but not that kind of money.
I just don't get people that don't think things through. I would rather stay at a hotel via company pay after I've been here long enough and not get anything. Or, do the other thing and get a room on my dime and still make out within the 10 hour rule. Today? I opted for them to pay for the room. I was done with that place and I had finally gotten word: driver will be here in 2 hours. Will whoop dee doo. If I lose a couple hours of detention pay, I'm not going to lose sleep over it after sitting in this dirt, barren parking lot with nothing within walking distance for almost 22 hours.
I'm not really used to this kind of company. I'll give the older drivers credit for the company being forced to pay for things that other companies wouldn't even think of. I don't want to ruin it for them, which was another factor in my taking a company paid hotel. But, plenty of drivers don't do that, they'll take the pay and sit at that lot for days. But, they complain about it. Why not just pay for your own hotel and they don't even have to know about it? Just curious.
Anyway, it's almost bed time. Tomorrow will be driving all day, get home tomorrow night, spend the night at the house and then get up early, I am assuming, to get another load and off to who knows where. She wanted me to go to PA again, but since I couldn't get out of here, she has something "else" for me in mind, of the which I don't know. I would have gladly taken PA. Nice long, high paying run. She gets me the miles, tho. She mixes it up with short and long runs.
Anyway, I think it time to be off to bed.
Going on 19 hours of waiting in Brownsville, TX. I have gotten pretty lucky every time I"ve come down here - until this trip. I got here with 2 minutes left on the clock before I had to shut down. I wanted to get here so I could legitimately say I am on the wait clock and get paid for it as soon as I got here. Meaning, 19 hours of waiting at what I believe is $22 per hour. I'll have to double check that on my pay slip when they snail mail it to me. I actually had no idea if was going to have to wait or not, but if I did, you aren't getting paid until you actually arrive and the full trailer is sitting on the lot and you are waiting for one to come up from Mexico.
I was told by the people that run this place that there was one coming mid afternoon. That effectively puts my out of the running for getting home today. I have no desire or need to be driving until 3 am, I just won't do it. Drive til' 11 or so, take my 10 break and then finish it off tomorrow. Or, if it doesn't get here until too late, I won't even take off tonight. I'm just not in love with night driving and there isn't any need to get back at some certain time tomorrow. If they need the trailer for another load coming down here, the earliest is going to be for a Sunday load time. And after computer my hours, I won't have enough to take another load, I'll have to do a 34 hour reset, which would be quite fine by me.
Have half of Saturday off and all of Sunday and then get with it Monday morning if something is available. It's become evident that use new drivers, or at least me for sure that I know of, are really just giving tenured drivers the ability to take time off.
There are a few things I"m not liking about this job, the truck situation is the one that I am having a hard time dealing with, the rest of it is stuff I can just overlook and continue on. I'm not in love with seeing $1,200 being taken out of my checks in taxes, either, that's a bit ridiculous. That's not 401k deductions or health insurance coverage, that's just taxes. I just got 401k started, probably didn't come out of this check tho. For the life of me, I cannot remember how to get onto this company's intranet and see pay stubs. Going to have to figure that one out again. But, anyway, I'm having 10% of my checks taken out for retirement savings starting next paycheck.
I've been respectful about it, but I"ve made no bones about my discontent with trucks, being shifted around from one to another to another, getting dumped into a truck that has over half a million miles on it and has broken down twice in the short amount of time I've been in it. At the same time, I haven't quite pulled myself to the point of starting to look for a new job. I just despise looking for jobs. At least the paychecks are quite good here, which is a mitigating factor in all of this.
If there was a store within walking distance, I would go buy some cleaners and scrub the interior of this thing down. I'm in a company truck now, old as it may be, and it has the Quaalcom on it. That means if I want to go to the store, I have to log in and go on duty to use it. Which means the 14 hour clock starts ticking and doesn't shut off. If you do no more driving that day and go off duty, then it's 10 hours before you get your 14 reset back again. That's right, you drove the truck for 15 minutes you still have to start all over. Pretty unfair and unrealistic, but this is what the feds mandate.
Well anyway, new things on the horizon as I will really start looking for a house for them starting this coming week. Just didn't want to waste too much time on it when we were informed they would have to move since it was 2 months out. I've found a few interesting ones, but they are also looking around when they are out and about. They found a couple of places not too far away but thought the monthly rate was too high. I'm helping them get into a place because they have zero credit, I'm not paying for it. Well, I"ll pay the deposits but that's it. Yes, I know it's in my name, yes I know I will be held responsible if they don't pay me for some reason, noted.
Well really, since I'm sitting here I might as well get on the rental sites and start searching. A productive use of my time. I have so much data left this month - which resets tomorrow, I think I will stream a movie as well.
Anyway, just an update.
I was told by the people that run this place that there was one coming mid afternoon. That effectively puts my out of the running for getting home today. I have no desire or need to be driving until 3 am, I just won't do it. Drive til' 11 or so, take my 10 break and then finish it off tomorrow. Or, if it doesn't get here until too late, I won't even take off tonight. I'm just not in love with night driving and there isn't any need to get back at some certain time tomorrow. If they need the trailer for another load coming down here, the earliest is going to be for a Sunday load time. And after computer my hours, I won't have enough to take another load, I'll have to do a 34 hour reset, which would be quite fine by me.
Have half of Saturday off and all of Sunday and then get with it Monday morning if something is available. It's become evident that use new drivers, or at least me for sure that I know of, are really just giving tenured drivers the ability to take time off.
There are a few things I"m not liking about this job, the truck situation is the one that I am having a hard time dealing with, the rest of it is stuff I can just overlook and continue on. I'm not in love with seeing $1,200 being taken out of my checks in taxes, either, that's a bit ridiculous. That's not 401k deductions or health insurance coverage, that's just taxes. I just got 401k started, probably didn't come out of this check tho. For the life of me, I cannot remember how to get onto this company's intranet and see pay stubs. Going to have to figure that one out again. But, anyway, I'm having 10% of my checks taken out for retirement savings starting next paycheck.
I've been respectful about it, but I"ve made no bones about my discontent with trucks, being shifted around from one to another to another, getting dumped into a truck that has over half a million miles on it and has broken down twice in the short amount of time I've been in it. At the same time, I haven't quite pulled myself to the point of starting to look for a new job. I just despise looking for jobs. At least the paychecks are quite good here, which is a mitigating factor in all of this.
If there was a store within walking distance, I would go buy some cleaners and scrub the interior of this thing down. I'm in a company truck now, old as it may be, and it has the Quaalcom on it. That means if I want to go to the store, I have to log in and go on duty to use it. Which means the 14 hour clock starts ticking and doesn't shut off. If you do no more driving that day and go off duty, then it's 10 hours before you get your 14 reset back again. That's right, you drove the truck for 15 minutes you still have to start all over. Pretty unfair and unrealistic, but this is what the feds mandate.
Well anyway, new things on the horizon as I will really start looking for a house for them starting this coming week. Just didn't want to waste too much time on it when we were informed they would have to move since it was 2 months out. I've found a few interesting ones, but they are also looking around when they are out and about. They found a couple of places not too far away but thought the monthly rate was too high. I'm helping them get into a place because they have zero credit, I'm not paying for it. Well, I"ll pay the deposits but that's it. Yes, I know it's in my name, yes I know I will be held responsible if they don't pay me for some reason, noted.
Well really, since I'm sitting here I might as well get on the rental sites and start searching. A productive use of my time. I have so much data left this month - which resets tomorrow, I think I will stream a movie as well.
Anyway, just an update.
Monday, February 12, 2018
So now, I'm getting dumped into yet another truck. This time, a rental another guy's been using. Unlucky him, they are dumping him into an old truck that is like a piece of s*** as is the one I am currently driving. That will make 5 trucks I have been in since starting this company, trust me, that is quite abnormal and quite unacceptable. They really should have never put out any ads looking for new drivers, they weren't set up for it and almost 4 months later, they still aren't. I'd go back into that day cab rental over this old heap of a rental that I'm going into today.
The idea that any large trucking company is using old trucks......
Well, anyway, Ann called me a little while ago with this news. Joe is getting out of his rental and I would really appreciate it if you could come in and take it and a trailer over to the plant and get loaded. Oh. That's it? Just load it? Oh, no you take to the plant too.
I had to bite my tongue. I don't want to lash out, I really don't want to take it out on Ann anyway, really nice lady, but enough is enough. All these other drivers are driving late model Peterbilts. I mean, within 2 years old, maybe 3 in some cases.
I mean seriously, these woes started immediately after we got out orientation - they had no trucks available for us and couldn't find any rentals - and has continued on since then. I really don't want to start looking for another job. It's such as pain in the @$$ to fill out all those applications, take phone calls, reply to emails, etc ad nauseum. I have to weigh in my mind whether driving in these old, junk trucks is any worse than going through yet another employment process. Number of companies I have been working at in a short period of time be damned. There is a shortage of drivers, companies are upping their pay scale to attract new drivers and increasing benefits.
Whatever. I'll have 3 days on the road to think about it, I figure that's what this run is going to take in terms of time on the road. 2 nights, 3 days. At least I'll get some miles in if nothing else.
Oh well. Off to the races.
The idea that any large trucking company is using old trucks......
Well, anyway, Ann called me a little while ago with this news. Joe is getting out of his rental and I would really appreciate it if you could come in and take it and a trailer over to the plant and get loaded. Oh. That's it? Just load it? Oh, no you take to the plant too.
I had to bite my tongue. I don't want to lash out, I really don't want to take it out on Ann anyway, really nice lady, but enough is enough. All these other drivers are driving late model Peterbilts. I mean, within 2 years old, maybe 3 in some cases.
I mean seriously, these woes started immediately after we got out orientation - they had no trucks available for us and couldn't find any rentals - and has continued on since then. I really don't want to start looking for another job. It's such as pain in the @$$ to fill out all those applications, take phone calls, reply to emails, etc ad nauseum. I have to weigh in my mind whether driving in these old, junk trucks is any worse than going through yet another employment process. Number of companies I have been working at in a short period of time be damned. There is a shortage of drivers, companies are upping their pay scale to attract new drivers and increasing benefits.
Whatever. I'll have 3 days on the road to think about it, I figure that's what this run is going to take in terms of time on the road. 2 nights, 3 days. At least I'll get some miles in if nothing else.
Oh well. Off to the races.
Sunday, February 11, 2018
Sunday morning. Get up at 7am, usual routine in getting ready for work and getting there. Hook up to trailer, get to plant, etc. Get to loading rack. Dude goes out, bang bang bang bang bang!!! It's the normal noise you here when they are using a solid brass hammer to hit a solid brass fitting snug. No sparks, is the point and easy on and off. Just beat the crap out of the fitting with large ears to hit onto on and then the same thing reversed to get it off.
Well, I'm sitting in the driver's "lounge", I guess you could call it, playing on my cell phone and I keep hearing this banging. After a while, I'm thinking, this isn't normal. You hear the banging for 2 rounds and that's it. I've heard this 10 times at least. So, I put all my gear on, go out there and find that there is a bad fitting on the trailer. He was attempting to get the thing off of there, which obviously wasn't going to happen without some help. Some serious help at that. He was trying to just push the thing off with a giant plumber's wrench, I knew that wasn't going to work after 2 seconds of looking at the situation.
I did do mechanics and I still do occasional plumbing for decades. First off, the the entire thing had had 130 below zero liquid passing through it. Second off, you know when something is that hard to break free, you are going to have to both muscle it with your hands and bang on it with a large hammer at the same time. I suggested to him that's what he needs to do and offered my help, of course. There was no way on earth anyone would have ever gotten that fitting off of there in those conditions by themselves. We wrestled with that stupid thing for half an hour before finally getting it loosed. It eventually came off. We're talking both of us pushing on that wrench - 3 hands and me banging on the thing with the hammer at the same time.
I was a bit surprised to see they actually had this particular fitting, a brand new one, sitting out there ready to be put into use. He stated that he could have just said no and sent the trailer out of there, but decided that since we don't current have a mechanic (he quit last week) he would help us out. Which was cool. Getting the fitting on there was easy. But getting the plate that goes around the fitting, that perfectly fits the octangle it is? Yikes. That took a while. Then, the entire thing had to be bolted back to the floor, yet another muscle versus physics situation that we eventually won.
After that, it was nothing. Just fill the truck up and go. But, as this day didn't start out right, it wasn't going to get any better. Because, the time it took go to from the loading rack to the scales, about 10 minutes, the truck started dumping engine coolant. I knew this because there was steam pouring out the hood of the truck. I could smell it, I knew it wasn't a fire so I didn't quite panic. In fact, I just got off the scale, ignored it and went inside to get the paperwork done. Now that I had the truck loaded, I might as well get that finished and then deal with this nonsense. I came back out when another helpful driver came up - hey, I saw a trail of fluid leading from the scale to where you are parked and that giant puddle under your truck. I thanked him, he was trying to help, even though I already knew there was yet another fiasco coming that I didn't really want to deal with after going through that ordeal with the trailer.
Not that I would have wanted to deal with it regardless of if anything had occurred before that. I knew that truck wasn't getting fixed today. This is not a major metropolitan area with at least a few truck repair shops that are open 24/7. There are plenty of repair shops here, but they aren't going to be open on Sundays. You might get emergency service out, but it's going to cost you a lot more, if it's even available, than a repair shop during it's regular business hours is going to cost.
So, after having a conversation with my manager, who had called the dude over repairs, she instructed me to take the truck back to the yard, drop the trailer on the cement (heavy trailers can actually tip over in soft dirt), unhook and the repair coordinator would see about getting the truck fixed today. Again, I knew that wasn't going to happen. I figured I would end up going home and I was right. So here it is, Sunday night and I've been home since 2:00 pm.
It is obvious that the "repair" the dealership did in Tulsa wasn't a good one. I was happy that this didn't happen out in the middle of nowhere, and that I got to go home instead of sitting in a dead truck putting out no heat because the fluid had all but drained out of it. Amazing the thing didn't over heat coming back to the yard, I suppose 32 degree weather helped with that.
Regardless, I went into the office and waited. She eventually called me back. You might as well go home and take the afternoon off. Yup, I thought but didn't say, I knew this was coming. A lot of other thoughts that came to mind as well that I didn't mention.
Such as this hype that was given to all 3 of us new drivers endlessly that there were 10 new trucks ordered and that we would be in rental trucks for a short time until they arrived. This little lie, I'm calling it a lie now, started before we ever got into orientation. It was told us during orientation. It was reaffirmed to us multiple times after orientation. I've not said anything to management about this so far. But they are pushing it. The other 2 new drivers are far more upset about this than I am and I have been through a lot more than them since starting work here. They have yet to unload a single truck, for starters, but that is minor compared to some of this other stuff.
I don't have any jobs lined up. I stopped looking after getting this one, hoping that this one would be "The One". Even if not perfect, good enough. I am capable of tolerating a lot of shit in this industry, but junk trucks are not one of them. You go from one breakdown to the next. You live inside of someone else's misfortunes in breaking things, scuffing things up, tearing up interior, filthy carpeting, etc. Basically, someone else lived in there before you and indelible marks to remind you of that. Most companies are now actually giving drivers either new trucks, or late model trucks that are still in good condition.
Whatever. I've given my all to make a good impression, bust my ass, get the job done, to get this in return? There are plenty of trucking companies wanting jobs out there. There is a huge shortage of drivers right now. This company included in the dilemma of trying to attract new drivers.
I'm in the "whatever" mood right now. I'm tired of seeing companies treating their employees as expendable trash. The 'if you don't like it, leave" mentality. They can sit in their offices and make all kinds of dictations about how drivers are to run their lives in their trucks and fully forget that we are human beings and, we have life experience and, we have expectations of the companies we are working for. Really, all it would take is a decent truck, with a nice interior that hasn't been trashed.
Okay, well, it's night time, I'm just sitting here contemplating what my next move is. I'm likely to start putting out applications again.
Well, I'm sitting in the driver's "lounge", I guess you could call it, playing on my cell phone and I keep hearing this banging. After a while, I'm thinking, this isn't normal. You hear the banging for 2 rounds and that's it. I've heard this 10 times at least. So, I put all my gear on, go out there and find that there is a bad fitting on the trailer. He was attempting to get the thing off of there, which obviously wasn't going to happen without some help. Some serious help at that. He was trying to just push the thing off with a giant plumber's wrench, I knew that wasn't going to work after 2 seconds of looking at the situation.
I did do mechanics and I still do occasional plumbing for decades. First off, the the entire thing had had 130 below zero liquid passing through it. Second off, you know when something is that hard to break free, you are going to have to both muscle it with your hands and bang on it with a large hammer at the same time. I suggested to him that's what he needs to do and offered my help, of course. There was no way on earth anyone would have ever gotten that fitting off of there in those conditions by themselves. We wrestled with that stupid thing for half an hour before finally getting it loosed. It eventually came off. We're talking both of us pushing on that wrench - 3 hands and me banging on the thing with the hammer at the same time.
I was a bit surprised to see they actually had this particular fitting, a brand new one, sitting out there ready to be put into use. He stated that he could have just said no and sent the trailer out of there, but decided that since we don't current have a mechanic (he quit last week) he would help us out. Which was cool. Getting the fitting on there was easy. But getting the plate that goes around the fitting, that perfectly fits the octangle it is? Yikes. That took a while. Then, the entire thing had to be bolted back to the floor, yet another muscle versus physics situation that we eventually won.
After that, it was nothing. Just fill the truck up and go. But, as this day didn't start out right, it wasn't going to get any better. Because, the time it took go to from the loading rack to the scales, about 10 minutes, the truck started dumping engine coolant. I knew this because there was steam pouring out the hood of the truck. I could smell it, I knew it wasn't a fire so I didn't quite panic. In fact, I just got off the scale, ignored it and went inside to get the paperwork done. Now that I had the truck loaded, I might as well get that finished and then deal with this nonsense. I came back out when another helpful driver came up - hey, I saw a trail of fluid leading from the scale to where you are parked and that giant puddle under your truck. I thanked him, he was trying to help, even though I already knew there was yet another fiasco coming that I didn't really want to deal with after going through that ordeal with the trailer.
Not that I would have wanted to deal with it regardless of if anything had occurred before that. I knew that truck wasn't getting fixed today. This is not a major metropolitan area with at least a few truck repair shops that are open 24/7. There are plenty of repair shops here, but they aren't going to be open on Sundays. You might get emergency service out, but it's going to cost you a lot more, if it's even available, than a repair shop during it's regular business hours is going to cost.
So, after having a conversation with my manager, who had called the dude over repairs, she instructed me to take the truck back to the yard, drop the trailer on the cement (heavy trailers can actually tip over in soft dirt), unhook and the repair coordinator would see about getting the truck fixed today. Again, I knew that wasn't going to happen. I figured I would end up going home and I was right. So here it is, Sunday night and I've been home since 2:00 pm.
It is obvious that the "repair" the dealership did in Tulsa wasn't a good one. I was happy that this didn't happen out in the middle of nowhere, and that I got to go home instead of sitting in a dead truck putting out no heat because the fluid had all but drained out of it. Amazing the thing didn't over heat coming back to the yard, I suppose 32 degree weather helped with that.
Regardless, I went into the office and waited. She eventually called me back. You might as well go home and take the afternoon off. Yup, I thought but didn't say, I knew this was coming. A lot of other thoughts that came to mind as well that I didn't mention.
Such as this hype that was given to all 3 of us new drivers endlessly that there were 10 new trucks ordered and that we would be in rental trucks for a short time until they arrived. This little lie, I'm calling it a lie now, started before we ever got into orientation. It was told us during orientation. It was reaffirmed to us multiple times after orientation. I've not said anything to management about this so far. But they are pushing it. The other 2 new drivers are far more upset about this than I am and I have been through a lot more than them since starting work here. They have yet to unload a single truck, for starters, but that is minor compared to some of this other stuff.
I don't have any jobs lined up. I stopped looking after getting this one, hoping that this one would be "The One". Even if not perfect, good enough. I am capable of tolerating a lot of shit in this industry, but junk trucks are not one of them. You go from one breakdown to the next. You live inside of someone else's misfortunes in breaking things, scuffing things up, tearing up interior, filthy carpeting, etc. Basically, someone else lived in there before you and indelible marks to remind you of that. Most companies are now actually giving drivers either new trucks, or late model trucks that are still in good condition.
Whatever. I've given my all to make a good impression, bust my ass, get the job done, to get this in return? There are plenty of trucking companies wanting jobs out there. There is a huge shortage of drivers right now. This company included in the dilemma of trying to attract new drivers.
I'm in the "whatever" mood right now. I'm tired of seeing companies treating their employees as expendable trash. The 'if you don't like it, leave" mentality. They can sit in their offices and make all kinds of dictations about how drivers are to run their lives in their trucks and fully forget that we are human beings and, we have life experience and, we have expectations of the companies we are working for. Really, all it would take is a decent truck, with a nice interior that hasn't been trashed.
Okay, well, it's night time, I'm just sitting here contemplating what my next move is. I'm likely to start putting out applications again.
Very glad I didn't try to swap trucks yesterday. I wouldn't even have gotten out of the Ryder truck rental place in time to get back to the dealership to get "my" truck. I'm still very disappointed after being told by numerous beings in this corporation that they were getting 10 new trucks to find out yesterday they aren't getting any new trucks, they had been given to "other" people and that was that. Change that, I wouldn't have even made it TO the Ryder place after all the rigarmaroo at the Volvo dealership. Without going into all of that stuff and ready to leave, I get a message on the screen on the dashboard about a light that has an open circuit.
I assume this means a burnt out bulb. I checked all the lights, but admittedly didn't check the brake lights. Yet, anyway. They make it next to impossible to do that without having someone else out there looking at them. I found something to prop the Johnson handle down enough to engage the trailer brakes, enough to turn all the brake lights on. Sure enough, the passenger side brake light inop. I was treading the waters of not having enough hours for the day to sit around waiting or "authorization" to buy a freaking sealed light and then have someone install it, so I just bought the thing and installed it myself.
The days of hotel stays are over. Unless this truck breaks down again. What I found utterly hilarious is that the only thing wrong with it was the clamp that blew off the hose. Yup. I mean, I took pics of this shit and sent it to my manager who sent it to the dude that is supposed to "know everything". Not my truck, not my money. I document everything with pics, if they want to ignore that, that's on them.
Wait, I shouldn't say over completely. In situations where I find myself having to sit for 15 plus hours, I likely will find my own place and it's whatever. I guess I'll have to get used to this truck - or go find a new job, cause' they could care less about broken promises of new trucks. I didn't ask for a new truck, btw this came from them at the get go. I guess I good sign should have been that after orientation, they didn't even have trucks for us to drive. Still, this thing has over 500 k miles on it, it was sitting in a yard for them to get rid of it, not for some new driver to have to come along and take. And now, these other 2 new drivers are going to get stuck in old trucks from the teams that got the new ones.
_______________________
Saturday. Day off. Been doing laundry literally all day long. Lots of back log in that stuff. Put together my new office/computer chair. I'm also going to buy a nice, new computer desk and also a dresser/chest of drawers set. I found one that I talked down to $250, very nice looking set but I don't have the time to go up there and get it. It's about 60 miles from here. Well worth the trip, just no time today. I have too much to get done around here and then, off to the Port again tomorrow. That's Cheniere. I don't really want to be sent there too often, tho. I hope she doesn't make a habit out of it. You make no real money on that trip. Other drivers warned me about it, but after actually doing one of those trips, I can see why. It's basically a waste of time. I mean, if I can do it in one day, then fine. But last time, too many obstacles put in my way to get that done.
I'ts probably around a $300 trip, so yes, one day. But, regardless of when I get back, either tomorrow night or Monday morning, it will cost me Monday of getting another load and getting out on a hopefully longer run. I'm making a minimum of $300 per day at this job, some days much more than that.
Well. Anyway. Upon looking at the closets in the tractor more closely, the one that is really narrow is a hanging clothes closet. Which would be fine in some other setup, but not in a tractor where space is limited. that closet could have been made much wider and accommodate for many other things than just hanging your clothes up in there. Like a refrigerator? I can keep my clothes in a duffel bag, thanks, I need the space for other things. Volvo messed up on that one.
Uhh, I guess I'm stuck in the thing, that has an automatic transmission that I totally despise. After being in the rental truck and shifting gears, I didn't want to go back to this thing. I found out at the rental place that they actually - allegedly anyway - have a thing on commercial licenses that's added if you aren't "qualified" to use a manual transmission. The whole trucking industry is being transformed into something totally unrecognizable. People that can't shift gears?
More and more stories about driverless trucks. They're coming. I don't know when they will take over the industry, probably years down the road, but it's going to put a lot of people out of work. Millions and millions of people aren't going to have a profession anymore. So what's my take on this? I can't stop automation. I can't stop technology. I don't trust driverless trucks for several reasons but they are hell bent on putting them out there. It's coming, sooner or later.
They can do most of the work I'm currently doing. Excepting at places that the driver has to unload - but that can be accomodated for. I just don't know. I'm getting too old to try and switch to something new. Well, not really. I could if I were forced into it. If I were ask my company right now if they were going to do the driverless route when it becomes available, they would probably say no. But given the opportunity? Sure, those trucks will cost a LOT more, but you aren't paying a driver and giving him/her benefits.
It's kind of sucky, really, that they are hell bent on going that route. I just have to accept it's coming and what am I going to do about it? Nothing. I'll drive until they don't need me anymore and then? I dunno. Maybe I'll have property by then and can raise a small herd of cattle. I was in an Uber today, the dude is older and doing it for extra income. But even that is going to go away to driverless cars.
This technology is being tested, it's only a matter of time. The only question that remains in my mind is: will they allow this technology to transfer over to hazmat? And I can guarantee you, they don't have anyone at gas stations that can unload those trucks. There are situations I can think of where automation isn't going to work. Or, it will work to get the product there but after that, unless they also are going to have robots, it's going to need a human being to fulfill the rest of it.
Funny we're in an age where humans are being factored out. I'm not 20. I don't have my whole life ahead of me. But, I will adapt if I have to, I'll figure something out. Just kind of scary, really. To think that in the near future, probably anyway, millions and millions of people's line of work will be eliminated.
I assume this means a burnt out bulb. I checked all the lights, but admittedly didn't check the brake lights. Yet, anyway. They make it next to impossible to do that without having someone else out there looking at them. I found something to prop the Johnson handle down enough to engage the trailer brakes, enough to turn all the brake lights on. Sure enough, the passenger side brake light inop. I was treading the waters of not having enough hours for the day to sit around waiting or "authorization" to buy a freaking sealed light and then have someone install it, so I just bought the thing and installed it myself.
The days of hotel stays are over. Unless this truck breaks down again. What I found utterly hilarious is that the only thing wrong with it was the clamp that blew off the hose. Yup. I mean, I took pics of this shit and sent it to my manager who sent it to the dude that is supposed to "know everything". Not my truck, not my money. I document everything with pics, if they want to ignore that, that's on them.
Wait, I shouldn't say over completely. In situations where I find myself having to sit for 15 plus hours, I likely will find my own place and it's whatever. I guess I'll have to get used to this truck - or go find a new job, cause' they could care less about broken promises of new trucks. I didn't ask for a new truck, btw this came from them at the get go. I guess I good sign should have been that after orientation, they didn't even have trucks for us to drive. Still, this thing has over 500 k miles on it, it was sitting in a yard for them to get rid of it, not for some new driver to have to come along and take. And now, these other 2 new drivers are going to get stuck in old trucks from the teams that got the new ones.
_______________________
Saturday. Day off. Been doing laundry literally all day long. Lots of back log in that stuff. Put together my new office/computer chair. I'm also going to buy a nice, new computer desk and also a dresser/chest of drawers set. I found one that I talked down to $250, very nice looking set but I don't have the time to go up there and get it. It's about 60 miles from here. Well worth the trip, just no time today. I have too much to get done around here and then, off to the Port again tomorrow. That's Cheniere. I don't really want to be sent there too often, tho. I hope she doesn't make a habit out of it. You make no real money on that trip. Other drivers warned me about it, but after actually doing one of those trips, I can see why. It's basically a waste of time. I mean, if I can do it in one day, then fine. But last time, too many obstacles put in my way to get that done.
I'ts probably around a $300 trip, so yes, one day. But, regardless of when I get back, either tomorrow night or Monday morning, it will cost me Monday of getting another load and getting out on a hopefully longer run. I'm making a minimum of $300 per day at this job, some days much more than that.
Well. Anyway. Upon looking at the closets in the tractor more closely, the one that is really narrow is a hanging clothes closet. Which would be fine in some other setup, but not in a tractor where space is limited. that closet could have been made much wider and accommodate for many other things than just hanging your clothes up in there. Like a refrigerator? I can keep my clothes in a duffel bag, thanks, I need the space for other things. Volvo messed up on that one.
Uhh, I guess I'm stuck in the thing, that has an automatic transmission that I totally despise. After being in the rental truck and shifting gears, I didn't want to go back to this thing. I found out at the rental place that they actually - allegedly anyway - have a thing on commercial licenses that's added if you aren't "qualified" to use a manual transmission. The whole trucking industry is being transformed into something totally unrecognizable. People that can't shift gears?
More and more stories about driverless trucks. They're coming. I don't know when they will take over the industry, probably years down the road, but it's going to put a lot of people out of work. Millions and millions of people aren't going to have a profession anymore. So what's my take on this? I can't stop automation. I can't stop technology. I don't trust driverless trucks for several reasons but they are hell bent on putting them out there. It's coming, sooner or later.
They can do most of the work I'm currently doing. Excepting at places that the driver has to unload - but that can be accomodated for. I just don't know. I'm getting too old to try and switch to something new. Well, not really. I could if I were forced into it. If I were ask my company right now if they were going to do the driverless route when it becomes available, they would probably say no. But given the opportunity? Sure, those trucks will cost a LOT more, but you aren't paying a driver and giving him/her benefits.
It's kind of sucky, really, that they are hell bent on going that route. I just have to accept it's coming and what am I going to do about it? Nothing. I'll drive until they don't need me anymore and then? I dunno. Maybe I'll have property by then and can raise a small herd of cattle. I was in an Uber today, the dude is older and doing it for extra income. But even that is going to go away to driverless cars.
This technology is being tested, it's only a matter of time. The only question that remains in my mind is: will they allow this technology to transfer over to hazmat? And I can guarantee you, they don't have anyone at gas stations that can unload those trucks. There are situations I can think of where automation isn't going to work. Or, it will work to get the product there but after that, unless they also are going to have robots, it's going to need a human being to fulfill the rest of it.
Funny we're in an age where humans are being factored out. I'm not 20. I don't have my whole life ahead of me. But, I will adapt if I have to, I'll figure something out. Just kind of scary, really. To think that in the near future, probably anyway, millions and millions of people's line of work will be eliminated.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Yes, I got the load to a place near Tulsa. I fortunately didn't have time to stop and get "my" truck out of the shop. By the time I hit Tulsa, it was too late. Both the shop and the place to return the truck to close at 5, no way in 40 minutes I would have been able to get all of that done. Drop the trailer at the shop, get my stuff out of the tractor and into the other one, drive the tractor back to the rental place, have them check it out, sign off on it, get an Uber to take me back to repair shop, finish up and leave? Naaah. So, I'm back at the hotel I was in last time I came up here, a Candlewood Suites place. Replete with a very nice Mexican food restaurant in front with excellent food and reasonable prices.
I don't feel bad, at all, about another company paid hotel night, for all I've gone through being here, I'm fine with it. I actually don't mind sleeping in that truck, it's the only good thing about it. The engine runs all night long with that humming sound I am used to and the minor vibration just lulls me to sleep.
Basically, the 10 new trucks was a fairy tale. Those trucks were given to teams. I mean, we've been told since we started orientation, well no, even before that, that they were getting 10 new trucks. So, no new trucks, stuck in this old thing with 500k miles, I consider them to have lied to me. But, what trucking company doesn't. They'll all say stuff to you to get you in there and then, boom. Uhh, yea that's not going to happen. Thanks.
I'm going to have to figure out if I can deck this old pile of trash out or just - what? I have to do something with it.
Well, it's not any better news for the other 2 new drivers. They are gong to be dumped into someone else's old relics as well. One of the trucks has a hole in the side of the sleeper. I'm just confounded that a company with their reputation would be treating new drivers like this. It's one thing to make promises you can't keep, it's another to not only not keep that promise but go to the entirely other end of the scale of it, in this case, not only not new trucks, but junk trucks on top of that. Stuff that was sitting in a yard somewhere, ready to be sold off at auction.
Oh, I got a call from Marie tonight. She's the lady that went up to PA after I did. We talked for over an hour on the phone. She's really cool. We went over everything. She was flabbergasted about our truck situation. You have to realize, all the drivers besides us new ones are driving newer Peterbilts in excellent condition.
Ugh. I"m getting off of here. This kind of talk is depressing, think I'll focus on something else.
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