I may not be using the spreadsheet currently, but I'm looking at your numbers on the videos like a hawk. I build my own spreadsheets for projections but your actuals are invaluable. Please keep sharing. Best data on TH-cam.
I’m rooting for your success dude times are not easy specially business owners but here’s where you prove yourself right and work as hard as it takes to make it work
I notice you don't like taking those weekend hold loads (the ones where you pickup Friday and drop off Monday for example) My opinion, grab those loads and time it so you're doing your reset during the weekend. Then you can run all week without having to take a reset.
So glad i left landstar and jumoed off the truck i was struggling to pay for a year ago. Not thriving now but not drowning either. Just floating till the market gets better. Best of luck out there
Ya its not a bad idea. I'm planning on doing it when possible. What I've noticed though is while they pay good, you have to be in the city they are originating. Else you have to dead head too far negating the high RPM
It's towards the end of the week You're not going to find anything really good on the load board, you got to stack your loads, get your load on Tuesday that you're picking up Thursday or Friday
Solid video. APU using less fuel should have the running expenses. Looking forward to next week with the long loads. Maybe the numbers will look a lot better.
Hey brother love the Chanel love the work you do I live in Toronto Canada can we see loads coming out if that area wondering if it worth to be an o/o for land star living in Canada
Please let me know if I am looking at your spreadsheet wrong but I don't think you are paying 2.93 a mile for fuel. If I am looking at this right, assuming your truck gets about 7mpg and going buy the national average of $3.76 a gallon your fuel expense on that 262 miles would be about .54 cpm which totals $140.73. Let me know if I'm looking at wrong. Love the info you give each week keep them coming.
Its correct. The fuel bill for the 200 mile load included the fueling up for the 2000 mile load I took. Its just the 2k load wasn't on this settlement but the fuel costs were.
Whew... no offense intended my friend but you have ALOT to learn, 1 thing - you gotta stop looking at them Cali loads to run all weekend, take something shorter that pays well, and get your reset, you're only gonna struggle to get anything paying worth a shit out of Cali anyways plus you'll still need a reset either way I don't think its worth it by the time you haul a load to Cali for 2 bucks per mile, then buy roughly 2000 miles worth of fuel, then sit for a reset, then the load out isn't gonna pay shit - you are gonna be better off taking a 1000 or 1500 mile load for more money per mile AND get your reset. 2nd thing - when I bought my APU, I could get warranty work done anywhere at a thermoking dealer - why are you making sure to go back to Vegas to get work done on it? For being leased onto somebody and having them shoulder some expenses, some of their rates looked decent - look not only at the pay at the end of the run, look at the total PROFIT per run, you need to be able to see the profit right away in a load
I am leased on elsewhere, and agree. Some of the rates aren't bad at all. But you can't run the way he's doing. Some of those flatbeds LOOK REALLY GOOD. I get $2.24+FSC all miles loaded or empty. I would buy my own flatbed to run with Landstar honestly. Looks like it would be a lot more than my current deal most of the time from all loadboard videos I've seen.
So basically, if he had that he wouldn’t have done owner operator and just stayed a company driver. His situation is his situation. Why would you invent a completely false scenario just to label him a failure under those circumstances?
@@truckingthesevenseas I would ignore people like that. You’re doing OK right now, so he invent a completely different life for you, and then says he would fail under those conditions. That’s just stupid and irrelevant. Obviously, if you had a family and a mortgage you would be doing things differently. You would be a company driver, or you might not even be a driver at all and doing something else.
he jus searching that because i asked him for it. i was jus curious i been lookn at diff carriers recently because where i am now is absolutly dog shit
@@412hwc I mean that’s fine but it doesn’t change what I said. I started in van and never did 34s to doing flatbed and always doing 34s. Just a different type of market. So it depends on what you want to do.
Agreed! I run recap and I can usually run every day and make my load times and never do a reset until I get home three or four weeks later. It obviously depends a lot on what kind of clothes you’re running. But a lot of guys like to max out their clock for loads that don’t really need it and then they have to take a reset and miss a day and a half. But they think they’re making more money that way. Most loads give you plenty of time to make the delivery so you can drive 7 to 8 hours a day and be able to run your recap without having to take a day off. But everyone is different. Some guys like to have a day off every week when they’re on the road. I personally like to run every day that I’m out because I can sit on my butt and not make any money at home and be more comfortable while doing it.
Can u do more reefer searchs around your current location at the time of video or bigger places. Ohio area ain't ever been pretty for reefer. Even ca rates I'd be curious about.
so for starters your cpm is incorrect because you have to add in truck depreciation even if your truck is paid for these plastic ones don't last decades. Also in 8 weeks even with 0 maintenance cost and if I give you an extra 5k that's 15k which is company driver money....... Not looking like its worth it at all.
ay tim your tha man but that turtle creek shipper is 24/7 i always show up at mid night because there isnt any other truccs and its a tight steel mill. i run outa there alot thats a damn good load. shit alot of those loads seem really decent buuut let me ask u this. what your seeing on that rate is before u get dispatched at 65 percent, well id be what 73 percent? i have my own trailer.
how does round trip work at landstar? do you gotta use their trailer? or do you take yours up there and then they just got a back haul set up for you? or do you have to specifically book that back haul still?
Also take into account that California will cost you $1.10 per 5 miles driven. That’s their road tax if you do not buy their fuel. If you plan on cheaper fuel out of state make sure it’s more than $1.10 less (which should be easy). And I believe Oregon is something around .30 cpm for road tax. You want to figure your heavy use road taxes into your rate per mile.
I took a load from landstar posted at DAT. $5800 posted rate and I took it for $6300 going to Oregon from NC. They just low ball you guys. Dry van class 8
Owner operator versus lease operator is Based on title of the truck. It's based on the MC authority You are still a lease operator you are leasing your truck to Landstar
Interesting, thanks for sharing. Heck of a way to make a living. Dealing with the company, the shippers, traffic, weather, cops, regulations, planning trips and loads, changing regulations, maintenance, fluctuating fuel prices, competition, being away from home, etc. Not for the faint of heart. Keep it up! You have a sharp eye on your business, you’ll find the best way to make it work!
You’re so funny with your ignorant comments about the other divisions of trucking With Flatbed you get paid more on assessorial for tarping and can put more money into the assessoral lines for waiting on loads When you are looking at reefer or dry van or flatbed, you want to strategize your operations to fit the type of equipment and the markets. You are trying to put a square peg into a round hole because you are trying to drive long haul dry van. That does not fit the market strategy well because most companies that deal with dry goods move them regionally and not OTR long distance. When flatbedding those drivers will usually be able to park on location at the shippers and receivers to do a reset before loading or unloading Flatbed drivers also have to take into account load and unload times and tarping so those guys will usually make allot of money on 450 mile loads or 1000 mile loads Longer loads usually end up screwing a guy up because of the weekends and there has to be a specific strategy to run flatbed Reefer is pretty much the only division that you want to run long haul because of the dock times but unfortunately Landstar doesn’t run much reefer freight on their network unless you are in express cold chain service
I may not be using the spreadsheet currently, but I'm looking at your numbers on the videos like a hawk. I build my own spreadsheets for projections but your actuals are invaluable. Please keep sharing. Best data on TH-cam.
I’m rooting for your success dude times are not easy specially business owners but here’s where you prove yourself right and work as hard as it takes to make it work
Appreciate your service sir, speaking to Landstar recruiter and gaining tons of insight from your vids. Best of luck out there
I appreciate that
I notice you don't like taking those weekend hold loads (the ones where you pickup Friday and drop off Monday for example) My opinion, grab those loads and time it so you're doing your reset during the weekend. Then you can run all week without having to take a reset.
Thank you for unlocking the spread sheet.
I’m definitely on it now
Hope you enjoy it!
So glad i left landstar and jumoed off the truck i was struggling to pay for a year ago. Not thriving now but not drowning either. Just floating till the market gets better. Best of luck out there
I find my sweet spot is on those 400-500 mile loads
Ya that's probably where its at...
Your spreadsheets rock!
I’m hot and cold on apu’s, especially running reefer. That’s 3 engines one needs to worry about. They are nice on a 34 though.
I’ve ran with both APU and EPU. The EPU gets cold to the point of discomfort in 95 degree heat. Can’t say the same for an APU.
I would be running the piss out of them short runs . I seen a cpl where you could’ve done 2 short ones a day and made bank .
Ya its not a bad idea. I'm planning on doing it when possible. What I've noticed though is while they pay good, you have to be in the city they are originating. Else you have to dead head too far negating the high RPM
Great to see the loads. Thx
No problem 👍
It's towards the end of the week You're not going to find anything really good on the load board, you got to stack your loads, get your load on Tuesday that you're picking up Thursday or Friday
Solid video. APU using less fuel should have the running expenses. Looking forward to next week with the long loads. Maybe the numbers will look a lot better.
Hey brother love the Chanel love the work you do I live in Toronto Canada can we see loads coming out if that area wondering if it worth to be an o/o for land star living in Canada
Please let me know if I am looking at your spreadsheet wrong but I don't think you are paying 2.93 a mile for fuel. If I am looking at this right, assuming your truck gets about 7mpg and going buy the national average of $3.76 a gallon your fuel expense on that 262 miles would be about .54 cpm which totals $140.73. Let me know if I'm looking at wrong. Love the info you give each week keep them coming.
Its correct. The fuel bill for the 200 mile load included the fueling up for the 2000 mile load I took. Its just the 2k load wasn't on this settlement but the fuel costs were.
@@truckingthesevenseas You are correct. I started typing before finishing the video. Thanks for the response. Be safe
I would suggest filming the phone calls that you have a successful negotiation on the rate
Whew... no offense intended my friend but you have ALOT to learn, 1 thing - you gotta stop looking at them Cali loads to run all weekend, take something shorter that pays well, and get your reset, you're only gonna struggle to get anything paying worth a shit out of Cali anyways plus you'll still need a reset either way I don't think its worth it by the time you haul a load to Cali for 2 bucks per mile, then buy roughly 2000 miles worth of fuel, then sit for a reset, then the load out isn't gonna pay shit - you are gonna be better off taking a 1000 or 1500 mile load for more money per mile AND get your reset. 2nd thing - when I bought my APU, I could get warranty work done anywhere at a thermoking dealer - why are you making sure to go back to Vegas to get work done on it? For being leased onto somebody and having them shoulder some expenses, some of their rates looked decent - look not only at the pay at the end of the run, look at the total PROFIT per run, you need to be able to see the profit right away in a load
Yeah a lot to learn going to run himself out of business
I am leased on elsewhere, and agree. Some of the rates aren't bad at all. But you can't run the way he's doing. Some of those flatbeds LOOK REALLY GOOD. I get $2.24+FSC all miles loaded or empty. I would buy my own flatbed to run with Landstar honestly. Looks like it would be a lot more than my current deal most of the time from all loadboard videos I've seen.
So basically if you had a family (kids) and rent or mortgage you would have lost everything already.
I actually totally agree with your statement. As of right now if I had a family and mortgage... Not feasible.
His truck is paid off so he should be ok soon
So basically, if he had that he wouldn’t have done owner operator and just stayed a company driver.
His situation is his situation. Why would you invent a completely false scenario just to label him a failure under those circumstances?
@@truckingthesevenseas
I would ignore people like that. You’re doing OK right now, so he invent a completely different life for you, and then says he would fail under those conditions.
That’s just stupid and irrelevant. Obviously, if you had a family and a mortgage you would be doing things differently. You would be a company driver, or you might not even be a driver at all and doing something else.
You can’t use the weekend hold the same way as van. 99% of flatbed shippers and receivers are closed on weekends. Why we do 34 resets on weekends
he jus searching that because i asked him for it. i was jus curious i been lookn at diff carriers recently because where i am now is absolutly dog shit
@@412hwc I mean that’s fine but it doesn’t change what I said. I started in van and never did 34s to doing flatbed and always doing 34s. Just a different type of market. So it depends on what you want to do.
@@JoshsTruckingadventures yea i nvr did van. never even ran recaps. flatbed gang💪🏼
@@412hwc I unfortunately started at knight but moved on quickly. Now I just haul equipment
I left a Landstar trailer a Year ago in a Pilot lot, it’s still sitting there.
Awesome video great breakdown, thanks you speak very fast though a little hard to keep up lol.
Who does resets. Just run your 8 days.
Keep making money. Work every day.
Agreed! I run recap and I can usually run every day and make my load times and never do a reset until I get home three or four weeks later.
It obviously depends a lot on what kind of clothes you’re running. But a lot of guys like to max out their clock for loads that don’t really need it and then they have to take a reset and miss a day and a half.
But they think they’re making more money that way. Most loads give you plenty of time to make the delivery so you can drive 7 to 8 hours a day and be able to run your recap without having to take a day off.
But everyone is different. Some guys like to have a day off every week when they’re on the road. I personally like to run every day that I’m out because I can sit on my butt and not make any money at home and be more comfortable while doing it.
Can u do more reefer searchs around your current location at the time of video or bigger places. Ohio area ain't ever been pretty for reefer. Even ca rates I'd be curious about.
Los Angelas, CA Load board search incoming
so for starters your cpm is incorrect because you have to add in truck depreciation even if your truck is paid for these plastic ones don't last decades. Also in 8 weeks even with 0 maintenance cost and if I give you an extra 5k that's 15k which is company driver money....... Not looking like its worth it at all.
ay tim your tha man but that turtle creek shipper is 24/7 i always show up at mid night because there isnt any other truccs and its a tight steel mill. i run outa there alot thats a damn good load. shit alot of those loads seem really decent buuut let me ask u this. what your seeing on that rate is before u get dispatched at 65 percent, well id be what 73 percent? i have my own trailer.
Ya I think its 72 or 73 percent. Something like that...
how does round trip work at landstar? do you gotta use their trailer? or do you take yours up there and then they just got a back haul set up for you? or do you have to specifically book that back haul still?
I believe it just shows you loads going to and from certain locations... I have never really used it but I think its more of a trip planner.
Also take into account that California will cost you $1.10 per 5 miles driven. That’s their road tax if you do not buy their fuel. If you plan on cheaper fuel out of state make sure it’s more than $1.10 less (which should be easy). And I believe Oregon is something around .30 cpm for road tax. You want to figure your heavy use road taxes into your rate per mile.
We need spreadsheet recap of the poker tournament.
One daily tournament... -$600. That's all I played lol
I took a load from landstar posted at DAT. $5800 posted rate and I took it for $6300 going to Oregon from NC. They just low ball you guys. Dry van class 8
You realize the rates that are posted on DAT are less than what is posted on our internal board. Which means the $5800 was trying to lowball you.
@@rodtimmer2456I was just point out that you can negotiate with the broker. I ended up taking it for $6300. 2880 miles
Owner operator versus lease operator is Based on title of the truck. It's based on the MC authority
You are still a lease operator you are leasing your truck to Landstar
Nice load search how about stl to texas dry van
Interesting, thanks for sharing.
Heck of a way to make a living.
Dealing with the company, the shippers, traffic, weather, cops, regulations, planning trips and loads, changing regulations, maintenance, fluctuating fuel prices, competition, being away from home, etc.
Not for the faint of heart. Keep it up! You have a sharp eye on your business, you’ll find the best way to make it work!
Do you have to call the broker and negotiate the price or just chose the load you want and pick it up.
If its a direct shipper just call and book. If its a non direct you negotiate...
goood lookin ouuuuut brooooski💪🏼💪🏼
You’re so funny with your ignorant comments about the other divisions of trucking
With Flatbed you get paid more on assessorial for tarping and can put more money into the assessoral lines for waiting on loads
When you are looking at reefer or dry van or flatbed, you want to strategize your operations to fit the type of equipment and the markets.
You are trying to put a square peg into a round hole because you are trying to drive long haul dry van.
That does not fit the market strategy well because most companies that deal with dry goods move them regionally and not OTR long distance.
When flatbedding those drivers will usually be able to park on location at the shippers and receivers to do a reset before loading or unloading
Flatbed drivers also have to take into account load and unload times and tarping so those guys will usually make allot of money on 450 mile loads or 1000 mile loads
Longer loads usually end up screwing a guy up because of the weekends and there has to be a specific strategy to run flatbed
Reefer is pretty much the only division that you want to run long haul because of the dock times but unfortunately Landstar doesn’t run much reefer freight on their network unless you are in express cold chain service
If you would… will you check loadboard out of Columbus Ohio…
Load board out of St. Louis Mo
Next video you got it
Man im glad im not a freight hauler. Yalls rates are scary.
leasing ain't it.
Dont take anything under 2.50 bro, your lowballing yourself if you do.