>I'd like to hear from other good running teams. What do you
>tolerate or not tolerate as far as running for someone? What
>kind of condition does the truck have to be in? What are
>"musts" when dealing with, or finding an owner?
For us, the truck must be in PERFECT working order. Dings, dents, scratches, a missing wheel cover, or clearance lights that don't match are OK. Those are just normal wear and tear items that develop in used trucks. But otherwise, EVERYTHING must work.
If a tire cups, we expect it to be replaced. If the truck pulls in one direction, we expect the alignment to be checked (after I've checked the tire pressure and such, of course). If the defroster fan only works on two speeds, not three, we expect it to be fixed. If the wiper blades need changing, we expect to be able to change them without complaint from the fleet owner that they were changed not so long ago.
In our experience with fleet owners, all of them, except one, were happy to keep their trucks in perfect working order and seemed happy to have teams that helped keep them so.
Of course if the fleet owner has a highly-productive team in the truck, it's a lot easier to say yes to the team's maintenance requests. A fleet owner does not need a degree in business to understand the wisdom of keeping a productive team happy and in a truck that runs.
As to what we will tolerate or not, we dumped (terminated our contract for cause) the fleet owner that was not willing to maintain his truck.
Our fleet owner requirements are simple and straightforward:
1. Maintain your truck.
2. Pay us on time.
3. Be available to talk if the need arises.
4. Run a FedEx CC White Glove truck, preferably a reefer.
Allow me to add that our current fleet owner has the best truck maintenance arrangement we've seen, at least from a driver's point of view. When we started with him, he handed us the keys to the truck and $500 cash to be used to maintain the truck. That's a HUGE plus in the driver/fleet-owner relationship. It enables us to get something (under $500) fixed immediatly and pay for it ourselves, without having to worry about getting reimbursed.
The next step is to send the receipt to the fleet owner and he reimburses us for the repair in the next settlement. When we turn the truck and keys back to him, we'll also return his $500 cash.
His trust in our mechanical judgement and integrity is happily returned. If a repair over $500 was needed and he was not available to pay for it by credit card or Comcheck, we would not hesitate to pay the full bill ourselves, because we know we'd be quickly repaid.
This enables us to keep the truck in tip-top shape at all times, which in turn keeps the truck running, which enhances our bottom line and his.