No, I understand just fine. Let's pretend I live in Key West, Florida. Do you think OAB will work well for me?.
True enough.
I stand corrected.
The old saying. "Location Location Location."
No, I understand just fine. Let's pretend I live in Key West, Florida. Do you think OAB will work well for me?.
As far as the "dedhed" is concerned, you make sure that the total pay for the run includes the dedhed return. And not having to take a $0.55 per mile move.
On that point you are correct OAB would not work for everyone.... One must figure out what profits they can live with...I think it's more of a lifestyle choices than anything else. However I find the argument oab means more profit a very tough argument to prove.
Anytime your driving unpaid miles your reducing profit. Besides that if I was always home I would find a girlfriend, there goes all profits.Living near a major city where your carrier is and has regular customers = more profit OAB. YMMV
So, what you are saying is , after delivery it's best to go to a place where you can get another load. Interesting.Living near a major city where your carrier is and has regular customers = more profit OAB. YMMV
Isn't that what its all about?So, what you are saying is , after delivery it's best to go to a place where you can get another load. Interesting.
I know one that lives in Marathon Key, which is about half way between Key Largo and Key West. There are cargo van expediters living in Ft Lauderdale, Alaska, Seattle, Denver, and even Bison friggin' South Dakota, for cryin' out loud. But they don't do OAB, either.
I once took a load from Indianapolis to Spokane. I didn't take it for standard pay, it paid more than enough to deadhead back to wherever I wanted to go. If it paid standard pay, I wouldn't have taken it, just like I won't take one to Laredo for standard pay. After delivering in Spokane I slept a day, then started trolling back towards Minneapolis. I got as far as Billings before getting a load.
I don't know that there is a "norm" for deadhead. Might be at some carriers. But basically, the customer couldn't care less about my deadhead, unless they're out in the boonies and need something shipped really badly. For the most part, I don't ask for deadhead. Either the load pays enough for me to take it, including deadhead, or it doesn't.Turtle what is the norm when asking for dead head pay .45 - .50 a mile (half miles paid on return) or do you get less/more? I guess it can depend on how much the customer is willing to pay or how bad the carrier wants to keep the customer happy.
In the above example, I made it as far as Billings, where I got a load out of Williston, ND. It was 325 miles dead, then going 1000 miles to Chicago. It paid something like $1600, which was more than a dollar a mile for all miles.Didn't know loads came out of Billings, maybe vans should start deadheading out of Denver to MT.
That's true if I was in a str8 I'd be sitting at a Walmart with the rest of themIt's a lot easier to dead head in a van than a st8 truck that's for sure even at 2.00 a mile loaded it's a profit killer
Not to mention the wasted hrs driving mt
Like I said...... if it works for you is all that matters..... works for me and my owner.I guess not knowing what rates anyone is or could get with a van or even a straight I have to ask why the fear of deadheading? I will deadhead 300 miles or more back home like it is nothing. Camping out in truckstops or Wal Mart parking lots when I can be at home, no hesitation on what I will choose. I eat a LOT of deadhead every year. More-so than most people pulling a van. I run around 23% deadhead a year. I think most trucking companies with 53' vans try to be around 6-8% or less, which isn't difficult to do. A couple of years ago it was much easier to get customers to cover big deadhead than it has been recently. It's a challenge but things always have a way of averaging out for me.
I eat a LOT of deadhead every year. More-so than most people pulling a van. I run around 23% deadhead a year. I think most trucking companies with 53' vans try to be around 6-8% or less, which isn't difficult to do. A couple of years ago it was much easier to get customers to cover big deadhead than it has been recently. It's a challenge but things always have a way of averaging out for me.
Yep I'm at 50%, wow 50cents after giving up 50 miles, I get 20 cents, used to be a quarterI would be willing to bet I can match your Deadhead or exceed it or anyone else on this forum. Heck I might even put it up against anyone in the industry. )Well except for Fastman of course, as he has been at it longer and with the same company longer then me.) Without pulling out the log book its fair to say our deadhead is getting stupid. Sometimes exceeds 50% on some offers, and 8 out of 10 offers are to pick up in a different state then where I'm sitting. With .50 cents paid after giving up 50 miles its not worth running those load offers. After turning down offers its a safe bet your better off just heading home because they won't look any farther. Take a long deadhead and the chance of wrong address/canceled load not being paid anymore it just isn't worth taking the chance. Near 50% deadhead leaves nothing on the other end of the load especially if your dead heading towards the drop.