Ok so here my question,IF I consider driving for owner who pays 60% to driver(s),how much would I get at $1.30 per mile on truck that gets 10 miles to a gallon?And what is fsc? How does that work???
Let's do the simple arithmetic first. At $1.30 at 60% you get 78cpm loaded. At 10mpg you spend 1/10 the cost of fuel per mile making it simple as well. If fuel is 3.799 it's 38cpm. If fuel is 4.099 it's 41cpm. If fuel is 3.949 it's 39.5cpm. At 3.949 using the fairly standard 9mpg and $1.25 fuel formula the fsc is 30cpm so your actual cost for fuel at 10mpg is basically a dime a mile.
FSC varies by company. Some pay a flat rate. Some pay differently on each job. Some pay only loaded miles, some pay all dispatched miles and some pay all miles. That's where you have to be careful. If you only get fsc on loaded miles you must be careful of deadhead miles and drive for best mpg, especially when not loaded.
So now you are getting 78cpm loaded plus 30cpm fsc minus a dime a mile net fuel cost for a bottom line of 98cpm in your pocket per loaded mile. Now let's say you get a 500 mile load with 60 miles to the pickup. You get $490 in your pocket on the load and you pay out $25 for fuel to the pickup and $50 for your net fuel cost loaded. That means $415 in your pocket when allis said and done. Your other option is to think like a driver and take 40% which is 52cpm with no fuel expense and puts $260 into your pocket after the load. You do have to buy the fuel to get to your layover and power the apu out of the $155 extra you make but it shouldn't be anywhere near that much.
$415 or $260, the choice is yours. Now, those numbers are hypothetical of course and depend on which carrier, how they do fsc, weight, terrain, weather, speed (smart, or fast), and other factors but the principle is the same and the results are similar.