Need to Know everything

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
Im 19 yrs old and i am very interested in becoming a truck driver, my momma is a truck driver as well as her boyfriend, but she never really told me much about it, so i wanted to ask others who have done it for a while to help explain everything known to a truck driver.

Thanks
 

BigBusBob

Veteran Expediter
Driver
The bad news 1st, at 19 or 20 it'll be tough to find a fleet that will take you, even if you do have your CDL A or B license. Reason being is that most fleets (for their insurance) won't generally hire unless your 23 or older. Now the key word there is "Most".

The good news, driving can be fun, seeing new and exciting places. Meeting people from all over. The pays not bad if you stay out and run.

You have to realize your personal life may suffer some, but if your good at balancing, then it'll all work out.

HazMat endorsement, while a hassle - is worth it. It will make you money. The test is not easy, and with the background check to get the endorsement now, it's not cheap either... and can run up to $200 depending on your state to get it onto your license.
One run though can pay for that easily.

What exactly do you want to know? tell us, ask us specific questions,

we're all a good bunch on here, and we're glad to be of assistance.

Big Bus Bob
 

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
i would just like to know about the diffrent types of trucks and which would be the best to get. i was thinking either a peterbilt or a kenworth. and how it is out there on the road with just drivin. about the age thing, i taled to the drivin school here in Albany and they said i could attend the school when i turned 21, i like to think of it as alot of time to study:) heres some questions if you would be so kind to answer them for me:

1. can you have animals on the truck? if so what kind?
2. How hard is it to find a job being a woman?
3. How much money can you make yearly?
4. do you make more money as a single driver or as a team?
5. How is the harrasment level?
6. can you have weapons? what kind?

those are just a few queestions, but thank you for the information. have a nice day!:7
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
1. can you have animals on the truck? if so what kind?

Most companies will allow a cat or dog. You must have all vet shots up to date with proof in the truck if you cross the boarder in to canada. Fedex white glove does not allow pets (unless someone corrects me) but regular fedex customer critical will. It depends on the company.

2. How hard is it to find a job being a woman?

Not hard at all. More and more women are entering trucking and companines are more than willing to hire them.

3. How much money can you make yearly?

That greatly depends on you. How much are you willing to work? a solo can do over 100,000 miles a year. The amount you make will depend on what you drive. A cargo van will gross less than a tractor trailer ;) If I had to guess roughly in a cargo van 65,000 in a straight truck 100,000 gross.

4. do you make more money as a single driver or as a team?

As a team with your husband or boyfriend. That way all the money stays in the family ;) Teams tipically see a lot more miles but of course there are two of you to split the money however you see fit.

5. How is the harrasment level?

No worse than your tipical house party. There are drivers that will flirt with you on the c.b. or worse, propsition you. Of course you can turn the radio off, or do what most women drivers do. Heckel them or play with the driver a bit on the c.b. This is something that from what I have seen is starting to die off a bit as women become more common in trucks.

6. can you have weapons? what kind?
Most companies won't allow firearms in the truck. However pepperspray, a tire iron and the such should be allowable. Again it veries on the company you select and DOT laws. The other problem with weapons in the truck is laws are different in every state. Something legal in Indiana might not be legal in Ohio.
 

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
so what kind of trucks are better in the long run? i wanted to start out driving for Swift or Gordon, does anyone have any info on those companies? And does anyone know the truck driver who goes by the name Scrappy?:*
 

BigBusBob

Veteran Expediter
Driver
Hi again, as far as Swift is concerned... I know Swift to a degree, having gone out with a former female trainer for Swift for a bit.

Swift has their trucks governed at 68, slow by most people standards within the truckin' industry. They're VERY safety concious about their drivers. They have good equipment, and every driver has a DM or Driver Manager, and that person works with you as you travel, they're kinda like your personal dispatcher. Co.'s like PII (Panther II) will give you multiple people on the QC (Qualcomm) to deal with on runs, which can get a little hectic - esp. when you have to explain the issues your having over and over again to new people. Imagine getting a new supervisor almost every time you have a question or assignment, it's sorta the same scenario. PII though is safety consious though for the most part.
Anyways, Swift does have strict rules...

a driver I know is no longer with them because he had his g/f on the truck without permission and went to a drop point with a restricted area within it that the truck had to go into... Well, the co. notified Swift that there was 2 people on the truck and to their knowledge that truck was only supposed to have one person in it. Upon finding out there was another person onboard the truck not given permission by Swift to be onboard that driver was told to take the truck to the nearest Swift terminal and drop the trailer so another driver could deliver the load. That driver was told to remove his gear from the rig and he no longer will be employed by Swift. He had to find his own way home.

If you plan on taking somebody onboard, get permission from your co. that you drive for. If you drive for an O/O leased to a co., get permission not only from the truck owner, but also the co. he/she is leased on with. Just because the owner says it's OK doesn't mean the trucking co. will say it's ok. Sometimes there's "rider programs", where you pay $25 up front for insurance for that person to the co. and then it may only be $2 to $4 per month there after. Sometimes they will just have you sign paperwork and have the rider sign paperwork as well so it's on record who is on that particular truck.

Weapons, most women I've come accross in trucking have weapons besides tire thumpers or big flashlights. They're generally packin' stuff like air pistols (revolver type gun that shoots compressed air out and can knock a person off their feet from 6 feet away), or stun guns, or pepper spray. Some carry small pistols or guns of some sort in their purses. Sometimes they'll have a small gun strapped to their ankle under their pants leg. Stun guns and pepper spray are the most common. Knives are next, various shapes and sizes. I personally am all for women packin', I think it's smart. Whether it's legal is another issue, but that legallity issue goes out the door if it saves her life or saves her from any kind of harm.

Dogs are good to have, so are cats, I personally though am a dog person. Dogs can bark and ward off people near the rig. Dogs will bark, growl, and/or whine to let you know somethin's wrong too, like water leaks or an open door or if they're leary of somebody or something. Cats sleep alot. just my opinion. I want a bark, a growl, not a meow. Animals like dogs and cats shed though, so bare in mind that you'll have to vaccuum more. and you have to empty litter boxes, or stop to let them out to walk and do their thing outside. 72" sleepers (the norm most of the time - for now) get small real quick.
I'm all for havin' pets onboard though, I think it's great.

Teams will almost always make more money than a solo on every run.
The truck can go farther in a shorter amount of time. A solo has to stop after a certain point.
Team driving though is all about trust, you have to be able to trust that person - your life is in their hands when you back there sleepin'.

As far as the KW and Pete thing, thats a choice only you can make, they're both good trucks. Do you want a semi or a straight truck (Box truck)? Do you want a class 8 based straight truck (a semi with a stretched frame and a cargo box)? Check out the photo gallery on EO (nickname for ExpeditersOnline.com), see all the different kinds of trucks and body styles. There's more than just Pete and KW's, there's Freightliner, Mack, Volvo, Sterling, Western Star, International... so there's plenty of styles to choose from. On the homepage of EO there's a list of dealers on the top left, click on them and browse thru them to see what you like. Check out the dealer web sites and browse their online inventory.

I'm rollin' out, but keep goin', we'll help you the best we can.

Later, Big Bus'
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
I think swift trucks are at 62 to 65 mph. Any faster than that and I would not be blowing past them all the time :D

Another question you have to ask yourself is general freight (swift, JB hunt and the such) or expedited freight. Both have their ups and downs. Expedited tends to pay better but general tends to be more steady work.
 

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
the reason i wanted to start out with swift was because that was the first company my momma started out with. she would always tell me about the jokes she would get from other truckers about the company and i would just crack up laughing, my favorite was:

Sure
Wish
I had a
Faster
Truck

Anyways, is it possible to get my CDL now?
and about the types of trucks, i wanted a Peterbilt or a Kenworth because they are the most masculin in my eyes and i have always had a weekness for those big trucks.;-)
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
I think you should be able to get your CDL. Most states you have to be 18 or older. When your a company driver you tend to drive what the company buys. I am starting to see a lot more volvo tractors than petes or kenworths. And almost ALL company trucks are governed at some speed between 62-70.
 

The Gibster

Expert Expediter
You might also try starting out by driving a school bus for a couple of years, till you become insurable to the fleets.

Now, before you go yukie-poo-poo at the idea, consider this:
*Usually paid training to get your CDL and Air brake and Passenger endorsements.
*About the same length as an expediter or Motorcoach, unless you get a Tart-Cart full of window lickers. (Lord, I appologize for that right there . . .)
*Pretty good pay - bus drivers are in short supply and high demand!
*Summers off
***AND MILES BEHIND THE WHEEL!

The responsibility of being a school bus driver always looks good on applications to prospective employers. But whatever you do, good luck to you!

The Gibster
 

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
the idea of a bus driver never really appealed to me, no offense to anyone who is one, cause i rode on a bus not to long ago and i know how kids are these days, and i dont like kids. i like to drive alone with my Red Sovine playin on the radio, not a bunch a little hollerin brats. but thanks for the info. so Whats the longest anyone has ever spent on the road at one time?
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
I have a friend that uses his trucks license plate as his address. He has a PO box in South Dakota (no state income tax) and uses a family members address in South Dakota for his base plate and CDL licnese. His truck is his home and he has lived in it for 6 years.

Since you don't like school buses (can't say I blame ya) how bout a city bus or perhaps a garbage hauler? Both pay really well and most newer garbage trucks load themselfs. Someone might be willing to put you behind the wheel of a dump truck or end dump as well.
 

rolling force

Expert Expediter
Merkurfan wrote:

"The amount you make will depend on what you drive. A cargo van will gross less than a tractor trailer If I had to guess roughly in a cargo van 65,000 in a straight truck 100,000 gros"

This is what goes to owner/operators if I'm not mistaken.
Just so that there is no misunderstanding.
Don't think that a driver makes that kind of money.
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
Good point. I should have mentioned that.

Although at .45 to .55 per mile in someone elses truck you could gross 50K a year. I think most companines (Swift, JB and the such) will start you MUCH lower (.35-.38) per mile until you have a year or two under your butt.
 

Broompilot

Veteran Expediter
The bad news is you are just uninsurable for this industry until you are at least 21 but most likely 23. Its the life expierences that Insurance Companies look at us with. They are the one rule maker that runs this industry.

The good news is you have a great attitude toward wanting to make a choice for your future profession. Please dont be like my duaghter and ignore me on what I am going to say. Learn everything about this business (trucking). Self defense, learn and read the magazines and there is also a book called bumper to bumper that describes everything about Trucks and the Trucking Industry read it and when you start to get your CDL you could teach the class.

Driving is just the small part of it, be a smart business student (stay in school or get some college classes) and you will have even the most chromed Pete driver admiring you. These guys did not get beaautiful trucks just because they earned it driving up and down the highways, they were smarter than the competition and out earned them and will continue to do so because of there earlier investment in education.

As for your choice in trucks, you have high standards I personally like that. Not that I would know anything about a KW. Even if it is a small one.

Good luck and hope you start learning cause that attitude is great!
 

lil_truckinQT

Expert Expediter
Thank you very much, I would never disregard anything anyone who knows more than me says, as far as im concerned you guys are my teachers, my momma just told me about the bad things about truckin, i know its nice to know all that but i would also like to know the good stuff to. this has been a serious business move that i have been interested in for 3 years now. the only thing holdin me back is my age. my boyfriend wants to become one with me, but i know he doesnt have the same passion for it as me. so i would rather him not. cause it aint no hang out job, even though im not a trucker yet, i still take it very seriously. i hope that when im ready i will be considered a great trucker, my grandpa was a trucker and my uncle was one to, it stayed in the males side of the family until my momma broke that and i want to be like her. i should tell everyone a little about myself, im 19 of course, im half mexican and half white, i love to draw trucks and aztecs and write poetry, i dropped out of high school, but i left home to attend wolfcreek job corps and i now have my GED and High school diploma, and as you all know, i want to be a truck driver, thank you all and i hope you a safe journey on the road.
 

merkurfan

Expert Expediter
Not sure where you live lil, but have you ever asked the local coop or farmer? Most states have farm licenses and it would probably much easier for you to get some seat time in a grain truck. It's not year round work but perhaps it will feed the trucking bug until your old enough to go otr.
 
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