Profile For Greg J.

Greg J.'s Info

  • Location:
    Citrus Heights, CA

  • Driving Status:
    Preparing For School

  • Social Link:

  • Joined Us:
    9 years, 9 months ago

Greg J.'s Bio

Im 37 years old and really considering a Professional Truck driving career. My father and 3 close friends all drive professionally. I play drums professionally and love to stay busy all the time, utilizing my ability to work hard, focus and excercise consistancy and dedication into my Jobs and Music. Extremely independant, working Forestry for 4 years, Living in my van to save for a drumset for six months using the gym to shower and my job to eat and save. Above all i really love this website, i enjoy reading all the stories from such awesome intelligent people -drivers - and i really think this site kicks some serious A---!!! Brett seems like an awesome dude and i really just wanted to join a group of new friends or explore new chapter of my life. Anyhow -Cheers to all and i look Forward to learning new things from all of you and reading some amazing stories!! thanks 4 all the rookie advice!!!! Greg

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Posted:  9 years, 9 months ago

View Topic:

Team Driving Vs Solo Driving

Thinking,

As far as team driving right out of school, the company I work for that is a requirement. And other companies are the same way. CRST is team driving. PAM is team.

There are several companies that have team driving.

Yes you can learn from the other driver. Unless, as they do here, they team rookies up together after their training period. So in actuality, you will both be learning together.

Yes, you can make more money and get more miles. Mostly due to the fact that you are paid your miles and your co-drivers miles both. You don't make as much per mile. You just make more miles.

As far as which is better. Only you can answer that.

I don't team. I WON'T team. For two basic reasons.

1. I can't sleep well in a moving truck. Towards the end of my training, we had to do two weeks team driving. I usually got the night driving. I mean he is the senior person on the truck so he gets his pick. I slept maybe 4 hours a night. Usually, I would sleep two hours, wake up, set up with him for a while then go take another 2 hour nap.

I was ready to die by the end of the two weeks.

And point number 2. You had better really like closeness. And really like the guy/gal you are teaming with. And don't care much for privacy. Because you don't have any. Well, very very little.

And as far as space. You don't have much as a solo driver and you have half that much as a team.

I love what I do. I am loving it more and more each day. But if tomorrow, every trucking company went to team driving, I would be out of a job.

I don't want to team. I hate to even think about team driving.

I WON'T team drive. smile.gif

Keep it safe out here, the life you save might be your own. Joe S.

best advice i have heard on this subject. thanx man!

Posted:  9 years, 9 months ago

View Topic:

Team Driving Vs Solo Driving

Well for starters, any company that runs teams love to have all the teams they can get. So if you request running team you might actually get kissed by a stranger in the offices. They love their teams. So you can do it if you want.

The two replies above were perfect - one person hates it, one loves it, and that's par for the course. Most people hate running team for the reasons The Blue Angel mentioned. I was one of em....hated it. But Guyjax has a great partner that he gets along with and loves that kind of running so it suits him.

Indeed one nice thing about running team out of school is having someone there to help you figure things out. Some companies do indeed require this. I believe Prime is doing this now if I'm not mistaken. After you get out of training you run team with another new driver for a short time. So that is an advantage.

Once you get hired on with a company you'll be required to run team with a trainer for anywhere from a few weeks to a few months. You'll know long before that time is up if you can stand the thought of running team or not.

But don't do it for the money. Even if you make more money running team it's not going to be enough to make it worth doing. If you like your space and privacy you'll gladly give up the potential for a little more money to run solo. But there's no reason to make less running solo. Solo and team drivers abide by the same logbook rules and team drivers get paid half of what solo drivers get paid per mile. So in the end a team driver in a truck that ran 6000 miles makes the same as a solo driver running 3000 miles (assuming the pay per mile is the same, which it's normally close). There's no reason you can't make about the same money running solo as you can team.

This is AWESOME ADVICE !!!!! learning alot from Bretts website. !!!

Posted:  9 years, 9 months ago

View Topic:

Team Driving Vs Solo Driving

Thinking,

As far as team driving right out of school, the company I work for that is a requirement. And other companies are the same way. CRST is team driving. PAM is team.

There are several companies that have team driving.

Yes you can learn from the other driver. Unless, as they do here, they team rookies up together after their training period. So in actuality, you will both be learning together.

Yes, you can make more money and get more miles. Mostly due to the fact that you are paid your miles and your co-drivers miles both. You don't make as much per mile. You just make more miles.

As far as which is better. Only you can answer that.

I don't team. I WON'T team. For two basic reasons.

1. I can't sleep well in a moving truck. Towards the end of my training, we had to do two weeks team driving. I usually got the night driving. I mean he is the senior person on the truck so he gets his pick. I slept maybe 4 hours a night. Usually, I would sleep two hours, wake up, set up with him for a while then go take another 2 hour nap.

I was ready to die by the end of the two weeks.

And point number 2. You had better really like closeness. And really like the guy/gal you are teaming with. And don't care much for privacy. Because you don't have any. Well, very very little.

And as far as space. You don't have much as a solo driver and you have half that much as a team.

I love what I do. I am loving it more and more each day. But if tomorrow, every trucking company went to team driving, I would be out of a job.

I don't want to team. I hate to even think about team driving.

I WON'T team drive. smile.gif

Keep it safe out here, the life you save might be your own. Joe S.

Awesome advice thanx!!! :)

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