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I’ve got to run to Texarkana and pick up 400 cases of Coors and be back in 28 hours.
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"Skeletons aint got nowhere to stick their money, nobody makes britches that size" M. Cooley
"We can be friends or I can kick your ass, you decide" R. Connor |
Originally Posted By InLove: I hop on I40 by Flagstaff all the time. I'm noticing more foreign truck drivers now than ever. Is it due to being a lucrative trade with minimal schooling or is it due to foreigners loaning money for rigs to other foreigners..? View Quote My theory is this: The general public has zero idea how many hours we work. I didn't know the expectations when I enrolled in school and the employers typically lie to new hires during the hiring process. Our employers are legally allowed to work us up to 70 hours a week. And most companies will push a driver right to the edge of what's legal. Of course this varies by company but overall, we work a lot. Sure, I made $115k last year driving. Not bad for a second year driver and 3 months of school. But I average 65 hours a week in some of the most dangerous conditions imaginable for multiple months out of the year. At night. I recently racked up over 500 miles in a week chained up. I've driven more miles chained up this season than most drivers do jn 5-10 years. It also takes a serious toll on your home life. For these reasons, a lot of Americans don't want to do this job. It's seriously rough sometimes. Foreigners don't seem to mind the hours and conditions as much. |
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My usual, sawdust and wood shavings out of the bins at the mill, take that 150 miles up hwy 299- tip the whole rig on the wheelabater at the energy plant in Anderson
Get back on the 5 for 20 miles to Shasta Lake hit the bins at that mill for a load of wood chips and head back up Hwy 299 to home base. 5 days a week. Also- what "JoshInReno" said.. |
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It’s hard finding drivers. I don’t pay amazing $27 a hour starting, but we do pay overtime, insurance, vacation, and cell phone. Home every night, guaranteed 40 hours a week. Can’t find anyone.
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Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: The Europeans do axle and bridge weights different than we do in the US. They prefer lots of tires on the ground for lower ground pressure per axle. In the US they want more space between axle groups to spread out the load on each bridge section. The above is a simplified explanation, it gets way more complicated. View Quote So can those European trucks with lots of tires and axels carry more weight or no? |
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Traveled the world, currently living in Indian Territory
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Got out of hauling mulch and wood fiber and start fuel hauling in super tankers on Wednesday.
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Originally Posted By barbcue: My usual, sawdust and wood shavings out of the bins at the mill, take that 150 miles up hwy 299- tip the whole rig on the wheelabater at the energy plant in Anderson Get back on the 5 for 20 miles to Shasta Lake hit the bins at that mill for a load of wood chips and head back up Hwy 299 to home base. 5 days a week. Also- what "JoshInReno" said.. View Quote What!!?? Actually BURNING something in a power plant in CA?? |
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Yup can you believe it ?
There are several energy plants here in North California that burn Bark, Sawdust, Pallets,Walnut husks, Wood shavings etc for Energy and sell it to PG&E. |
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Originally Posted By USCG_CPO: So can those European trucks with lots of tires and axels carry more weight or no? View Quote (A) yes, they carry more weight (B) they do not run super singles (C) the trailers don’t run duals (D) with the single axle on the tractor, and triple axles (singles) on the trailer, it’s easier to maneuver in the extremely tight streets |
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Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Well, shit! Does anyone have a turbo for a Cummins ISX laying around? I made it a bit over 100 miles and was just getting out of the worst of the snow just south of Wheatland and my turbo decided to exit stage right. The shop is sending a pickup and a wrecker to pick me up. View Quote Damn! She grenaded? Mine let go in May of 2021. Our wrecker brought me a spare tractor and took mine with him. I was maybe 40 miles from the shop, thankfully. Had me back in business the next day. That fucking spare truck is all the reason I’m the world for me to go easy on my equipment whenever possible. My exploded turbo in the scrap bin: Attached File Just finishing a mild pull up a hill, and “pooooo!!”, white smoke, no power. Threw her to neutral and coasted to the shoulder. |
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Originally Posted By Dan1918A2: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/157991/D6DED38D-42C6-472E-A029-C65B3DF2CA7C_jpe-2769281.JPG Just finishing a mild pull up a hill, and “pooooo!!”, white smoke, no power. Threw her to neutral and coasted to the shoulder. View Quote Jeebus, the size of those pistons |
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Originally Posted By Seth_Livzz: Jeebus, the size of those pistons View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Seth_Livzz: Originally Posted By Dan1918A2: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/157991/D6DED38D-42C6-472E-A029-C65B3DF2CA7C_jpe-2769281.JPG Just finishing a mild pull up a hill, and “pooooo!!”, white smoke, no power. Threw her to neutral and coasted to the shoulder. Jeebus, the size of those pistons 5.12” diameter, IIRC. |
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Originally Posted By Dan1918A2: Damn! She grenaded? Mine let go in May of 2021. Our wrecker brought me a spare tractor and took mine with him. I was maybe 40 miles from the shop, thankfully. Had me back in business the next day. That fucking spare truck is all the reason I'm the world for me to go easy on my equipment whenever possible. My exploded turbo in the scrap bin: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/157991/D6DED38D-42C6-472E-A029-C65B3DF2CA7C_jpe-2769281.JPG Just finishing a mild pull up a hill, and "pooooo!!", white smoke, no power. Threw her to neutral and coasted to the shoulder. View Quote Pretty much exactly word for word what happened to me this morning, it wasn't loud enough so I figured I didn't blow a hose (I was hoping that's all it was). I got lucky and was about 1 1/2 mile from a parking area so I limped in there. Lost a shit load of engine oil in the mile and a half through the exhaust. It got towed to a shop before the blizzard kicked in today, after the storm clears and the roads open we're towing it to our shop to get fixed so I don't know what the insides looks like yet. ETA: The Turbo is the original one from the old engine (2015) when they put the new engine in they swapped the old turbo to the new engine. This truck has worked hard it's whole life, it's always pulling heavy so it's not a big surprise that it let go. |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Picked up a brand new Volvo two weeks ago. I just turned 7000 on the odometer. Fired my student yesterday. Ran a load of Pepsi from Tracy CA to Phoenix today.
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We should have shotguns for this
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Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: This a Scheuerle InterCombi trailer, popular in Europe (and somewhat here) Each axle has 8 tires (from side to side) lots of axles and tires but the spacing is only 5' between each axle. Lots of tires so lower ground pressure per tire but the problem is the 5' spacing. We have problems permitting over the road with heavy loads with these because the engineers are looking at how much weight you're putting on each bridge section not necessarily how much weight per tire you have. Each axle also steers so it's very maneuverable for it's size. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/029-1409394.jpg This is a Faymonville HighwayMAX II. These are becoming very popular here in the US. There are only 4 tires per axle so more ground pressure per tire for the same weight but the trailer can extend out in two sections so you can have 3 axle groups of 3 with spacing of up to 24' between axle groups. The spacing between groups gives you a higher permit-able bridge weight on the highways. All axles also steer on this trailer https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/LR_1500_Crane_House-2661991.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: This a Scheuerle InterCombi trailer, popular in Europe (and somewhat here) Each axle has 8 tires (from side to side) lots of axles and tires but the spacing is only 5' between each axle. Lots of tires so lower ground pressure per tire but the problem is the 5' spacing. We have problems permitting over the road with heavy loads with these because the engineers are looking at how much weight you're putting on each bridge section not necessarily how much weight per tire you have. Each axle also steers so it's very maneuverable for it's size. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/029-1409394.jpg This is a Faymonville HighwayMAX II. These are becoming very popular here in the US. There are only 4 tires per axle so more ground pressure per tire for the same weight but the trailer can extend out in two sections so you can have 3 axle groups of 3 with spacing of up to 24' between axle groups. The spacing between groups gives you a higher permit-able bridge weight on the highways. All axles also steer on this trailer https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/LR_1500_Crane_House-2661991.jpg The original question was specifically about regular rigs, not heavy haul. I was answering the question - as it pertains to regular trucks, not the specialized tractors and trailers you’re using. The replies he got were either flat out wrong from my observations (‘they use super singles’) or then, your post seemed to go in the direction of heavy haul, which he had specified wasn’t what he was asking. 🙂 Originally Posted By USCG_CPO: I have a question for you guys with normal rigs and weights, not applicable to some of the stuff Seabee Mech hauls I was curious about the European lorry version of a semi trailer. They seem to prefer single wheels but more axles on their trailers, does this allow for a heavier load distributed over more ground surface or what's the deal? I also notice their tires are bigger than what I see on most US trailers. |
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53 tons of sand at a time, 14 mile round trip, 8 trips today and will be on this job all week along with about 25 other trucks.
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Originally Posted By Woodchuck1: The original question was specifically about regular rigs, not heavy haul. I was answering the question - as it pertains to regular trucks, not the specialized tractors and trailers you're using. The replies he got were either flat out wrong from my observations ('they use super singles') or then, your post seemed to go in the direction of heavy haul, which he had specified wasn't what he was asking. View Quote USCG_CPO, more info to go with your question: Super singles (at least here in the US) are mostly a weight savings thing (approx 200 lbs per axle) by eliminating the amount of rims on a truck to get a few more pounds of payable freight in the box, they have some advantages but also some disadvantages. I prefer the traditional dual tire set up, with a flat tire on duals you can still limp to a safe area, with super singles you're DIW unless you want to wreck an expensive rim. The formulas the engineers use to set allowable axle weight limits are the same whether you're a 5 axle Swift truck or a 19 axle heavy haul (outside of special permits). Here in the US more axles doesn't necessarily allow you to carry more weight (without getting into special permits), the Europeans have different limits and tend to prefer trucks and trailers with more axles and smaller spacing where here in the US they want more spacing between groups. More axles with less spread can actually reduce the amount you can weigh. For a deep dive: Federal Bridge Formula Weights https://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freight/publications/brdg_frm_wghts/ |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Well, shit! Does anyone have a turbo for a Cummins ISX laying around? I made it a bit over 100 miles and was just getting out of the worst of the snow just south of Wheatland and my turbo decided to exit stage right. The shop is sending a pickup and a wrecker to pick me up. View Quote Don't forget to get a new CAC or have them reverse blow it out at a minimum. Father-in-law didn't on his 3406 Cat and wound up needing ANOTHER turbo a few weeks later. Good luck....that's truckin'! |
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Originally Posted By Wings2Wheels: Don't forget to get a new CAC or have them reverse blow it out at a minimum. Father-in-law didn't on his 3406 Cat and wound up needing ANOTHER turbo a few weeks later. Good luck....that's truckin'! View Quote |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Thanks for the replies, I find all this shit interesting. I have always enjoyed listening to and watching big trucks work. I had several uncles who were short haul and long haul truckers plus I have a HS friend who owns his own business.
He must have nerves of steel cause he will often have a load to deliver from the mid-west to NYC I cant imagine navigating those streets in a big rig. |
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Traveled the world, currently living in Indian Territory
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Originally Posted By USCG_CPO: Thanks for the replies, I find all this shit interesting. I have always enjoyed listening to and watching big trucks work. I had several uncles who were short haul and long haul truckers plus I have a HS friend who owns his own business. He must have nerves of steel cause he will often have a load to deliver from the mid-west to NYC I cant imagine navigating those streets in a big rig. View Quote |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Originally Posted By Wings2Wheels: Don't forget to get a new CAC or have them reverse blow it out at a minimum. Father-in-law didn't on his 3406 Cat and wound up needing ANOTHER turbo a few weeks later. Good luck....that's truckin'! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Wings2Wheels: Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Well, shit! Does anyone have a turbo for a Cummins ISX laying around? I made it a bit over 100 miles and was just getting out of the worst of the snow just south of Wheatland and my turbo decided to exit stage right. The shop is sending a pickup and a wrecker to pick me up. Don't forget to get a new CAC or have them reverse blow it out at a minimum. Father-in-law didn't on his 3406 Cat and wound up needing ANOTHER turbo a few weeks later. Good luck....that's truckin'! Not just the turbo that one has to worry about. SOP after repair of a turbo failure is to run the return pipe into a bucket and let the turbo blow out the charge air cooler (for non-diesel peeps: big air-to-air radiator to cool the boosted air from the turbo) into a bucket. Purpose is to get out any debris OR OIL that may be in the CAC. Diesels WILL run on lube oil as "fuel" and will run wild until they blow up. Mechanics at a former shop learned that the hard way. Probably best to pull the CAC and send it to a radiator shop for cleaning. Or, as mentioned, just replace it. |
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Originally Posted By JP_in_STL: They run Super Singles a lot more than you see them here in the US. Still mostly dual wheel here in the States. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By JP_in_STL: Originally Posted By USCG_CPO: I have a question for you guys with normal rigs and weights, not applicable to some of the stuff Seabee Mech hauls I was curious about the European lorry version of a semi trailer. They seem to prefer single wheels but more axles on their trailers, does this allow for a heavier load distributed over more ground surface or what's the deal? I also notice their tires are bigger than what I see on most US trailers. They run Super Singles a lot more than you see them here in the US. Still mostly dual wheel here in the States. We run super singles on the front, and on our pup trailers, we also run them on the side dumps and belly dumps. We get more flotation and we have found less flats from picking up rocks then getting stuck between the duals. We do still run duals on the drivers. ETA, The box was supposed to get painted this last winter down time, unfortunately it was hauling snow so no down time. Attached File Attached File |
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How much crack did you have to smoke to reach that conclusion, a $20 rock or Whitney Houston level shit?
”Guitargod1985” |
Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: This a Scheuerle InterCombi trailer, popular in Europe (and somewhat here) Each axle has 8 tires (from side to side) lots of axles and tires but the spacing is only 5' between each axle. Lots of tires so lower ground pressure per tire but the problem is the 5' spacing. We have problems permitting over the road with heavy loads with these because the engineers are looking at how much weight you're putting on each bridge section not necessarily how much weight per tire you have. Each axle also steers so it's very maneuverable for it's size. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/029-1409394.jpg This is a Faymonville HighwayMAX II. These are becoming very popular here in the US. There are only 4 tires per axle so more ground pressure per tire for the same weight but the trailer can extend out in two sections so you can have 3 axle groups of 3 with spacing of up to 24' between axle groups. The spacing between groups gives you a higher permit-able bridge weight on the highways. All axles also steer on this trailer https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/119852/LR_1500_Crane_House-2661991.jpg View Quote How do the axles steer? Just a passive trailing link setup of some sort? I could see that being difficult to reverse, so maybe something else? |
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Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: I delivered produce to Hunts Point Terminal Market, NY one time. The hell with that shit, I'll stick to hauling super loads out west. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Originally Posted By USCG_CPO: Thanks for the replies, I find all this shit interesting. I have always enjoyed listening to and watching big trucks work. I had several uncles who were short haul and long haul truckers plus I have a HS friend who owns his own business. He must have nerves of steel cause he will often have a load to deliver from the mid-west to NYC I cant imagine navigating those streets in a big rig. You ain’t lying. I got my class A and was thrown directly to the wolves with routes in DC, NoVA, Baltimore, etc. While it was initially a nightmare, it made me learn faster than shit. Nothing sounds intimidating anymore. Been in GA since 2014, Atlanta traffic was an easy transition. Where I run now, I’m almost always way east of Atlanta on I-20 and on the 2 lane country highways. Feels like being partially retired in comparison. I’m not too far removed to appreciate that I have it damn good. |
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Bulldog Mack with a can on back.
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Originally Posted By LoBrau: How do the axles steer? Just a passive trailing link setup of some sort? View Quote On the Scheuerle trailer the front half of the trailer is steered by mechanical linkages connected to the draw bar, the axles are connected with tie rods. There are two hydraulic cylinders that are linked to the draw bar/front steering, those cylinders sends fluid back to two rear cylinders on the back half of the trailer when the draw bar moves, those rear cylinders provide steering input to the rear half of the trailer. The HighwayMax kind of works on the same principle but there is a rotating disk and a wedge on the 5th wheel plate of the trailer that creates the hydraulic input as the truck turns. Each 3 axle group is connected by tie rods, the 3 separate sections are connected to each other hydraulically. I hope the formatting comes out right: (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) O-O-O <--------------> O-O-O<------------->O-O-O Going down the road the truck controls the trailer steering automatically but both trailers can be remote steered with a wireless remote and an aux engine/hydraulic pump instead of by truck input for tight maneuvering. |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Deadheaded 300 miles on Sunday from our shop right back to the shop. Last time I hauled something was in Feb. kind of taking a break from all that and now I’m sitting in a hospital waiting on kid #2 to show up so I’ll be away from work for the next 3 months.
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Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Hydraulic over mechanical. On the Scheuerle trailer the front half of the trailer is steered by mechanical linkages connected to the draw bar, the axles are connected with tie rods. There are two hydraulic cylinders that are linked to the draw bar/front steering, those cylinders sends fluid back to two rear cylinders on the back half of the trailer when the draw bar moves, those rear cylinders provide steering input to the rear half of the trailer. The HighwayMax kind of works on the same principle but there is a rotating disk and a wedge on the 5th wheel plate of the trailer that creates the hydraulic input as the truck turns. Each 3 axle group is connected by tie rods, the 3 separate sections are connected to each other hydraulically. I hope the formatting comes out right: (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) O-O-O O-O-OO-O-O Going down the road the truck controls the trailer steering automatically but both trailers can be remote steered with a wireless remote and an aux engine/hydraulic pump instead of by truck input for tight maneuvering. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: Originally Posted By LoBrau: How do the axles steer? Just a passive trailing link setup of some sort? On the Scheuerle trailer the front half of the trailer is steered by mechanical linkages connected to the draw bar, the axles are connected with tie rods. There are two hydraulic cylinders that are linked to the draw bar/front steering, those cylinders sends fluid back to two rear cylinders on the back half of the trailer when the draw bar moves, those rear cylinders provide steering input to the rear half of the trailer. The HighwayMax kind of works on the same principle but there is a rotating disk and a wedge on the 5th wheel plate of the trailer that creates the hydraulic input as the truck turns. Each 3 axle group is connected by tie rods, the 3 separate sections are connected to each other hydraulically. I hope the formatting comes out right: (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) (hydraulic) (tie rods) O-O-O O-O-OO-O-O Going down the road the truck controls the trailer steering automatically but both trailers can be remote steered with a wireless remote and an aux engine/hydraulic pump instead of by truck input for tight maneuvering. Very cool, thank you. |
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I just picked up a job hauling 8-10 loads of bees. A 48’ loaded with sting is going to be fun.
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Originally Posted By bondryan: I just picked up a job hauling 8-10 loads of bees. A 48' loaded with sting is going to be fun. View Quote I know the truck stops don't like you guys hanging around. |
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USN Retired: APR 1988 - MAY 2008
"My center is giving way, my right is falling back, situation excellent, I attack." —Ferdinand Foch |
Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: I've always wondered if DOT gives bee haulers a wide berth, I can't image them beeing (see what I did there ) too gung-ho about doing a Level 2 on you guys. I know the truck stops don't like you guys hanging around. View Quote I remember when Bees weren't netted. I worked at a truck stop when I was in high school. There would be bees on the windshields of trucks for hours after a bee hauler came through. As far as DOT, I would imagine a load of bees would be a great place to smuggle some drugs. |
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Originally Posted By MobileHomie: I remember when Bees weren't netted. I worked at a truck stop when I was in high school. There would be bees on the windshields of trucks for hours after a bee hauler came through. As far as DOT, I would imagine a load of bees would be a great place to smuggle some drugs. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By MobileHomie: Originally Posted By Seabee_Mech: I've always wondered if DOT gives bee haulers a wide berth, I can't image them beeing (see what I did there ) too gung-ho about doing a Level 2 on you guys. I know the truck stops don't like you guys hanging around. I remember when Bees weren't netted. I worked at a truck stop when I was in high school. There would be bees on the windshields of trucks for hours after a bee hauler came through. As far as DOT, I would imagine a load of bees would be a great place to smuggle some drugs. I’m just doing local work. Bee guy trucks them from Cali to a collection yard, I get loaded at dark, and then I drive them out to the orchard on their roads and landings and they unload me. It’s for a local orchard, their trucks are both broke down with def issues so they called me. I do know that my bee guy said he got stopped at a scale on I5 for being overweight and they sent him to tech inspection. He got out and instantly started undoing his nets. Dot asked what he was doing and he told them they would die in the heat if he didn’t open the nets up and that he would have to stay parked in the same spot all day until the bees quit flying. He said they told him to get his net back on and leave. |
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Originally Posted By bondryan: I’m just doing local work. Bee guy trucks them from Cali to a collection yard, I get loaded at dark, and then I drive them out to the orchard on their roads and landings and they unload me. It’s for a local orchard, their trucks are both broke down with def issues so they called me. I do know that my bee guy said he got stopped at a scale on I5 for being overweight and they sent him to tech inspection. He got out and instantly started undoing his nets. Dot asked what he was doing and he told them they would die in the heat if he didn’t open the nets up and that he would have to stay parked in the same spot all day until the bees quit flying. He said they told him to get his net back on and leave. View Quote Lol, nice, diesel bears wanted no part of that action. Also, both trucks down for DEF related issues? No fucking way. I don’t believe it. And now that CA successfully had that shit forced upon everyone at a national level years ago, they’re abandoning it and saying electric trucks are the only way. Which will be a failure. Liberals and the organizations they run are pure cancer. Nothing they’ve ever touched has gotten better. Ever. |
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ass
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bananas
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Originally Posted By PhuzzyGnu: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/69748/PXL_20230404_201542016_jpg-2770489.JPG Easy money. View Quote Blech....electronic logs. If I was running today, I'd STILL be on paper logs with a pre-emissions motor. F California and any other state/port that requires neutered motors. |
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Originally Posted By Dan1918A2: Lol, nice, diesel bears wanted no part of that action. Also, both trucks down for DEF related issues? No fucking way. I don’t believe it. And now that CA successfully had that shit forced upon everyone at a national level years ago, they’re abandoning it and saying electric trucks are the only way. Which will be a failure. Liberals and the organizations they run are pure cancer. Nothing they’ve ever touched has gotten better. Ever. View Quote At one point this year we had all three of our trucks down to emissions issues. All under 450k miles, and all maintained better than the manual requires. 1 ISX15 1 X15 1 DD15 I’m selling the two Cummins trucks, keeping the Detroit and buying myself a pre emissions, pre e-log T800 like I started with. The Detroit gets deleted next week, don’t need a warranty because every warranty claim I’ve had has been due to emissions BS anyways |
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Originally Posted By shootstraight93: 53 tons of sand at a time, 14 mile round trip, 8 trips today and will be on this job all week along with about 25 other trucks. View Quote I ran into a couple of drivers at one of the local bars that are working on a new reservoir being built near me. They are driving haul trucks and their job 10 hours a day 6 days a week is to get loaded, drive about 1/2 a mile dump then get back in line to get loaded again and repeat. Like one of them told me "they are paying me for the neck down" because it's damn near mindless factory work. Granted they are paid fairly well but I get bored easily and couldn't do it for more than a few days. I have a few buddies that are also working on the same project and it's a pretty damn impressive feat of engineering they are working on. https://www.northernwater.org/CHRP |
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Tell you what, I've never seen a bull hauler in the inspection bay at the chicken house
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...another place, where the faces are so cold
I'd drive all night just to get back home |
Originally Posted By mpatch: I would lose my mind doing that. I ran into a couple of drivers at one of the local bars that are working on a new reservoir being built near me. They are driving haul trucks and their job 10 hours a day 6 days a week is to get loaded, drive about 1/2 a mile dump then get back in line to get loaded again and repeat. Like one of them told me "they are paying me for the neck down" because it's damn near mindless factory work. Granted they are paid fairly well but I get bored easily and couldn't do it for more than a few days. I have a few buddies that are also working on the same project and it's a pretty damn impressive feat of engineering they are working on. https://www.northernwater.org/CHRP View Quote It’s definitely not the most glorious job, but I’m thankful for MI Bridge laws and paid by ton jobs especially when the operators on either end are great to work with. With freight rates what they are right now I’m glad I’m not hauling a van. We do a little RGN work as well but that’s been watered down by all the Van haulers thinking they can haul equipment for 3.90 a mile. |
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Originally Posted By PhuzzyGnu: Because they don't fucking slow down for nothin'. View Quote I typically drive 5-7 mph over on the freeway, there is a small two man operation in my area that hauls two bull racks and those guys pass me like I’m standing still a few times a week when I’m on the same route as them. Not sure how they aren’t getting smoked with tickets like I have in the past. |
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