First time buyer O/0 |
11-17-2019, (Subject: First time buyer O/0 ) Post: #15 | |||
| |||
RE: First time buyer O/0 (11-17-2019 )Mattman Wrote: I was also wondering if he was a driver or about to become one. Before trucking... -- I have always considered myself a good driver. LOL.. Most would believe that about themselves though, I think, even if they weren't. Given that, i had already gotten those years of driving fast everywhere out of my system, and I drive by "what your supposed to do, speed-wise, etc." vs.. what seems like everyone else's "what you can get away with without a ticket" mentality. -- I also only ever mostly owned a stick vehicle, as they are far more efficient on fuel + engine lasts 1.5x longer in one, and they are far less maintenance over time to own, etc. when driven for economy instead of like a mad-man. -- Years of driving and owning stick,.. my vehicles stay in nuetral as much as humanly possible while maintaining fair momentum too. I drive in neutral, always have -- hence the engine and drive train lasting 1.5 - 2x longer in a stick. -- It thought to myself, I am a very skilled driver ... I also used to, when younger, haul boats up and down a white-water river, back roads., offroads, for several years with pick-up truck and had to do a lot of backing in and out of the woods long distances w boat trailers, offroads, etc. ... how hard would a semi-trailer be compared to this ... I though it would not be much different. Then I go to truck school... --- DAMN IT WAS HARD TO BACK THAT THING UP compared to a little pick-up truck with trailer on it! -- I had no idea how skilled someone has to be to be good at it. -- It humbled my ignorant arsse real fast! --- I figured I had many years of driving stick.. this truck thing would be a breeze for me... DAMN WAS I WRONG!!!-- I WAS ACTUALLY THE STUDENT THEY SAID WOULD NEVER FIGURE OUT HOW TO SHIFT A TRUCK!!!--- This is because EVERY BAD HABBIT you could possibly have driving a stick-shift -- WAS MY PROBLEM and It took a lot of work to get rid of those bad habits. It WAS my biggest problem for a long while. -- People who have never shifted a stick-driven vehicle have the advantage here .. no bad habits up front.LOL -- WOOW!!!! it was hard that first year not to short-change every right turn I would make. I would pull forward as fas as i could,.. still it was not enough. .. got me so many times, it was not even funny! - I had to learn the hard way,.. you take every goddman inch of that turn and don't turn that wheel until your almost going to hit other vehicles to make it!. Had to learn that you have to gat as far to the left as possible in your lane, or even split the lane to your left half the time .. before you get to that turn, or your screwed! .. I was damn glad I drove for someone else during that first year... I screwed a few things up, but got away with it thankfully. If it had been my own equipment,.. I would have paid dearly for it. -- Still I was better than a lot of my peers in that company. -- I learned a lot of backing tricks and the mechanics of how a truck backs up by playing video game - "18 wheels of steel" and driving the entire game backwards for hours at a time... It is actually a decent truck simulation .. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/18_Wheels_of_Steel -- i even learned how to back doubles up quite well in that game using the 6-point turn system method, though I never had to in real life thankfully lol. -- After a year, I learned real fast that it takes a lot of skill,... and ANYONE-- I MEAN ANYONE who is good at driving and backing up a truck with 53-foot trailers should be respected for this .. they have skill!. -- I also learned that, your truck is so heavy .. even bobtail .. if a tire comes off the pavement,... your in trouble real fast, if not instantly! -- Almost like every single road is nothgint but a cliff not to fall off of, that will screw your day up real fast if you fall off it. -- Tried to turn around once on a 2 lane road bobtail ... steer tires went into the grass a bit ... truck dropped instantly and axles hit the pavement so hard that it damn near knocked the teeth out of my head, hurt like hell! .. ... no warning, dry sunny day,.. never expected it to be so brutal. - I have never forgotten this. Truck weighs as much as 4 or 5 whole automobiles on those steer tires alone, just on its front end! - One tire drops off that pavement, especially on a rainy day at highway speed? Even on the edge of interstate, you might very well never wake up from the accident/situation that you have just gotten yourself into!. NEVER EVER leave the pavement on a roadway unless your ready to call a tow-truck or simply have a death wish. LOL I sliced a steer tire wide open on my first truck, couple months into being on my own ... company truck. - I touched the edge of a raised scale with side-wall as I was getting onto it, ever so slightly,.. load was late, gas station who owned the scale charged the company I was with for re-calibrating the scale and all sorts of other "loss of use" BS fees, etc. .. and a whole can of worms opened up to go along with this mistake. - I did not even do any damage to their scale, but they were hell bent on collecting big $$$ from it!. -- Everyone is out to sue truckers and their companies they drive for .. everyone it seems, and fully take advantage of even the least little thing a person does by mistake, like it is their right to squeese you for all you are worth in every way they can come up with, real or otherwise!. ======== --- So when I come on here and say to others -- My recommendation .. A person drive for a company for at least a YEAR before buying their own equipment, to get those green-horn, costly mistakes out of them -- It comes with a background of experience first hand... I had to learn all this stuff the hard way just like everyone else did. User's Signature: ->: What I post is just my own thoughts and Opinions! --- I AM Full Of S__T!. | |||
|
« Next Oldest | Next Newest » |
NOTE: Rawze.com is not affiliated, nor endorses any of the google ads that are displayed on this website.