Dry Trailer VS Box Truck

jpalmer

Seasoned Expediter
Hey guys, I've been looking into getting into a Box truck to push up my income a little. I am a courier in DFW. Lately i've been seeing a lot of Fifth Wheel dry trailers being hauled by pickups. What would be cheaper to purchase? the fifth wheel trailer or box truck? I am having issues finding a site on the net that has these types of trailers.

Would i get a better Weight limit with a box truck VS the Trailer and pickup?

Also. I don't have a CDL yet so it has to be under the limit...

Thanks for ya'lls help!
 

Crazynuff

Veteran Expediter
The trailers you see being pulled by pickups are probably private carriers . The big problem with them is they aren't dock height and probably wouldn't support the weight of a forklift . There are pickup and flatbed owners doing well leased to Acme . Without a CDL you'd be limited to a cargo van in expediting . I doubt you would see a boost in income . Many hotshotters with pickups and trailers stay under 26,000 lbs. and don't require CDL's .
 

guido4475

Not a Member
Yea, I was going to say, there are several people that have straight trucks that are 26,000 gvw and doing well at it.Even if it has air brakes and air-ride but is UNDER 26,000 gvw you do not need a cdl. The gvw rating is what dictates the need for the cdl.I have had 3 straight trucks set up this way, and researched it deeply before doing it for the first time. This is what the DOT calls a "gray area".
 

FIS53

Veteran Expediter
I agree that most of the trailers for pickups are not dock height although on my trip to Quebec last week I saw two that were. Both had raised framing above the trailer frame for the suspension etc and looked a little too top heavy for my liking. I also would like thicker tires on the trailer than either of these had so load limit might be lower than the trailers I looked at. But I was looking mostly at flatdeck ones. I looked at trailers for pickups last year and the load limit for most was 10,000# which isn't too bad. That's more than my s/t can haul. The only problem with the trailer and a pickup is that some jurisdictions do require a license upgrade for the truck - trailer combination of such weight limit, so check into that first.

My truck is under 20,000# gross so no special lic required. The truck handles pretty good and can move through traffic alright but no fancy moves though. Only part I don't like is the fuel mileage.
Rob
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Many hotshotters with pickups and trailers stay under 26,000 lbs. and don't require CDL's

If the state follows DOT regs, they have to have a class A to drive a combination trailer and truck over 10k - I just renewed my CDL and I asked to confirm what was in the book I used for the test. It is the combination of the trailer and truck that matters.
 

jpalmer

Seasoned Expediter
Hi Guys, Thanks for the advice!! I am not looking at getting into an expediter at this point. I want to stay local for as long as i can make enough to stay local. I make about 500 a week in a car right now. I could bump that up to about 700-1000 in a box unit....

Yeah, I didn't even think about have an endorsement for truck-trailer. And I am sure a box unit would do better on gas then a hauled unit. I do 350 to 500 miles a day in my car (i've gotta civic now) God that car gets incredible gas mileage. I do about half a tank a day on them miles. CRAZY! Won't be getting that in a truck though. But The per mile rate and weight costs will kinda help that.

P.S. Have any you guys ever heard of Everitt Express or Ceva Logistics? I am just curious cause they got box units flying around DFW like crazy now. Never seen them before.
 

bluejaybee

Veteran Expediter
I do alot of hauls for CEVA. They bought out the old Eagle Logistics company. They do alot of local and some OTR. Most of their trucks are leased to them by O/O's. Good folks to expedite for. Heard several of their drivers complaining about some recent changes they made. Of course, it didn't benefit the drivers, hence the complaining.
 
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