Showing posts with label autohauler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label autohauler. Show all posts

Carhauler Benchmarks And Techniques

Excellent Use Of Articulating Decks By A Carhauler / Autohauler Professional

carhauler
Photo Courtesy Of David ZamZow Of Wisconsin

Handling vans or larger vehicles can often seem challenging when loading a carhauler or autohauler trailer. I saw this load by Dave Zamzow and was impressed with how he used the articulating decks to house the sprinter vans. By simply flattening out the carhauler decking he was able to secure the vans and load them comfortably on the trailer.









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B.C....Before Carhaulers?

carhauler
Carhauler Autohauler Methods of the 70s
There are a lot of things which seemed like a good idea at the time. Even for carhaulers and autohaulers you would think the idea of loading that factory new car onto the large spacious trailer would be the way it has always been done. Not so. Below you see a world without carhaulers and autotransport

I can only imagine how bad this is for the car to be moved like that.





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Trucking May Be The Only Avenue Left..







I just read a story about how trucking is becoming one of the most popular fields to go into. As I scrolled down the page of the article, the comments from existing truckers said otherwise.

No problem. I respect everyone’s opinion and can see strong arguments for both sides. Trucking is difficult. The hours are long. Stories of mistreatment and abuse rampant. Many people drive recklessly around trucks. Your family life is strained by your time on the road. The industry is over regulated. Fuel prices are outrageous. The list goes on and on.

To be honest, the illusion that it is a desired field is probably not true. It is probably because the rest of the economy has become so marginal that people are becoming truckers.

Think about it. Millions of people cannot find any work. Hundreds of thousands of college graduates are working for little more than minimum wage because there are so few jobs for them. Other fields have seen their wages plummet.

Against that backdrop, with student loans due while you are living with your parents, trucking does not seem that bad. The modest wage increase is at least an increase. The companies themselves will at least make some effort to retain you since there are not as many people entering the field.

New truckers will probably come to the same conclusion in time that existing truckers have. In the meantime they will probably do it since it might be the only non-menial wage job that even exists

Time Will Tell....
http://www.overdriveonline.com/how-trucking-is-becoming-the-most-attractive-job-in-the-country/



The Dripping Faucet Of Trucking


I can still remember my Mom reminding me to make sure the dripping faucet in the bathroom is all the way off. That little drip over a month could add into the thousands over time. Without close observation, it is easy to neglect it. 

I mean what is one drop of water? 

Well for some reason I equate this to the trucking and transportation industry. One truck waiting for a delivery may not make a significant impact on wasted fuel and lost time. One additional regulation may not be that significant. One more toll increase might be lost in the sands of time. Multiply that by thousands of trucks over thousands of days and you come to some astounding numbers. Just for lost fuel and time in traffic alone, the public faces additional costs to the tune of:

$27 Billion

This is the number I read in Overdrive magazine that is wasted as we, and our trucks, are waiting in traffic. Shockingly, this number does not even mention the billions in regulatory cost that trucking has been saddled with. On top of that, you couple lost road time, lost fuel, and regulation with a driver shortage, and the $27 Billion number begins to approach triple digits.

Tolls, and inflation are additional costs that send the amount of increased costs into the stratosphere. You combine all these costs and it is a real possibility that road transportation could become prohibitively expensive for a lot of things. 


Drop coming out of a faucet coated with calciu...
It adds up really fast (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
This statement probably seems ridiculous but costs of doing business in transportation keep piling up on truckers and fleet managers and the public is feeling these costs at the store since it ultimately impacts them. Pretty soon those drops of wasted water begin to overflow the sink.

A penny more here, a few cents more there do not seem that big a deal but it is being absorbed by the public on everything from fuel, to food and even to non essentials. The faucet is dripping over and over and no one is looking at how to shut it off. In the case of the public, I have a strong suspicion they do not even realize the connection between runaway trucking costs and their finances. So in turn it is not just road delays we have to worry about, but a system that is being pushed far beyond what it can bear financially.

Eventually, that faucet will have totaled enough to fleece the public out of HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS in added costs of what they use in daily life.

A possible solution?

I have no fast solutions but I do have some ideas.

As an industry we need to direct a portion of our outreach and education to the general public and consumer groups focusing on

  •   The costs we are paying in terms of regulation, inflation, fuel,  tolls, congestion..etc
  •   How those costs are draining their pockets at the store

We need to encourage the public to contact their Congressman about slowing the pace of regulation, tolls, and fuel increases. Connecting fuel increase reduction with the unopened Keystone Pipeline might not be a bad issue to push as well.

Another direction would be to see how we can reduce road congestion by the smart management of traffic. With all the technology can’t we get more people off the roads by giving businesses incentives to start telecommuting programs? This may seem silly but it is clear that those cars on the road add up.

Why not offer incentives to come to work at different times of the day to reduce bottlenecks that occur when people come at one set time.

It will take a lot more than just a few ideas, but this is a start. I would love to hear your ideas…

-Michael Saks
  Editor of Haulin
  msaks@ectts.com


Overdrive article link
http://www.overdriveonline.com/traffic-costs-trucking-industry-27-billion-a-year-says-study/

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Is The Economy Inching Forward?



Year five of the recession and I hear good news but like many people I am wondering is it just fluff or is it a true step to a real recovery. In trucking, we see good indicators but the overall plight of the public is not improving. In fact, with so many news sources saying so many things, it is hard to really know how relevant the news is in our daily lives.

Likewise, I search for indicators that do show ACTUAL economic change, not just a spin on things that really are not. One indicator that is good news, is the housing report. According to an article in Transport Topics, US home sales are on the rise.

This being true that is a really good sign. Someone somewhere has to be buying a home to get the prices to rise. Even if this is an artificial jump, rising home prices might help people refinance or sell their homes to get out from house payments that are beyond their means.

I would not read more into this than that. Home price increases are a small forward step in what appears to be a slow recovery. It is still a positive step though...

US-Home-Price-Gains-Hit-Six-Year-High(2013, January 14) retrieved from http://www.ttnews.com/articles/lmtbase.aspx?storyid=2158&t=US-Home-Price-Gains-Hit-Six-Year-High

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