RANT ALERT FOR NEW PASSES 🚨 When I passed my test I jumped straight into store deliveries and I’ll be completely honest I cried my first week. The stress of some of these places…city centres with a double decker at 9am, rush hour in full swing with no experience. It was so stressful. But my advice to anyone looking to drive is to go head first into it. Do the tight city centres, do the blindside revering into alleyways, have the arguments with people in cars and I guarantee you’ll become a better driver than most. Complacency is a terrible thing and I couldn’t imagine anything worse than driving up and down the same stretch of the M6 every day and knowing every pot hole delivering to the same place. 7 years into the job and every day is near different, worked for different companies (retail/supermarkets) and I’d advise new pass drivers to go into that sector. However, the pay has got a lot better but the planning hasn’t. And if planning send you to a place you’re unsure of and feel there’s some sinister motive behind it being kept from you, then speak to other drivers, union reps or have a look yourself on google for restrictions for time etc. Never be embarrassed or scared to say no to a job if you feel like you’re not safe to do it. And most importantly, know the route you’re going. If a diversion happens that’s unforeseeable but use your truck sat nav and use street view on Google to know exactly where a service yard is and how to get into it. Map instructions have often been done by some driver trainer who’s 30 years into his time at the place, just wants to retire and waltz’s up in a pool car and draws a sketch that’s inaccurate at best. So plan accordingly yourself. And finally in my rant, anyone who wants to do their HGV licence but is put off by the negativity, I say get your licence anyway. The same people moaning on TH-cam are the same people who moan before they even walk through the door into work before they even know what they’re doing for the day. The same people who moan about the job but have conveniently been at the same company for 20 years instead of going somewhere else. Make the job work for you, not the other way around. Do agency work and find what works for you. I’ve done Tuesday-Saturday for years, home every night and work no more than 48 hours a week. 44k a year. Earn more or less, do more or less, that’s the beauty of agency work. Don’t be put off, if it’s what you want to do… do it and good luck!
Thank you so much for your rant, it’s honestly the most helpful comment I’ve ever read on trucking. I’m 19, currently working in a warehouse but I’ve always wanted to get my HGV license. Most people are negative about it and say don’t get into it. But like you’ve just said, make the job work for you! Also great advice about jumping headfirst, I’ve always had that philosophy elsewhere so I can apply that here. Whenever I’ve gone for something I’ve gone straight into the hardest task to get it out of the way, so store deliveries would be a great place to learn the most as a new pass HGV driver. I’m going to attempt to have my HGV license sorted by next summer, it’s quite expensive and I’ve got another few months of saving first. But thank you so much for your rant and helpful words, honestly so helpful!
i was in the same spot when starting out, and i most certiantly agree with your point of becoming a better driver, now i do long haul and i love it, never going back to distribution work ever again
@@smokharn3699 I know people making 40k driving FLT for four nights a week (40 hours tops) and quite a bit more if they work weekends too. True enough that's the top end of the pay scale for forkies unlike in HGV trucking. @antm2296 Not wanting to drive in circles around the same warehouse every day forever - even for 40k - I just passed my C+E licence but haven't earnestly started looking for jobs yet. I'm definitely not against difficult work in whatever form, but as my very first HGV job, I just don't have the confidence to try this. Hats off to you. A few months in, maybe.
Before I retired I did lock and drop for Iceland. When I asked if the store directions could be improved and made suggestions as to how I was told, "Well you know where it is now!" I pointed out that it wasn't for my benefit but for the next poor sod who was sent there! I suspect that most companies take a similar attitude...
Most of these drops were not designed for artics, but they still get sent to them. It's only the skill of the drivers that get the dispatchers out of trouble with type of deliveries.
Not the places to be honing your reversing skills at all. Master it and then try it, if that floats your boat. Me, I'd rather avoid at costs, even if I can do it, it's aggravating so why entertain it. It only takes a moment's lapse of concentration to scrape someone's Merc and ruin your week. Nah, big yards and easy loading bays or dropping your trailer in a services park is much better,
Raul you are definitely an experienced driver. IMO what makes the driver a professional driver is not just the ability to get into tight spaces. It is to do it calmly, safely and with the confidence like you have. The self control is very impressive and this is what makes you a pro. Thanks for the videos.
And have the ability to complain about it in such a way that non drivers can understand, sounds petty, but it's a bloody skill. Can't be easy some of the stuff he does. Some of it looks like it'd be tricky in a van
Giving me anxiety just watching you! I had a couple of really bad turns and a dead end yesterday, I wasn’t even sure I could get out of one of them but it worked out with a bit of shunting and patience.
Nice piece of driving Raul. I worked for a company who's maps were awful and we had lots of drivers who's first language wasn't English. I took some photo's of drop/collection points and landmarks nearby and a basic last mile Google maps ( I figured a sat nav would get them close enough ) . I then made an one page guide with arrows added for left and right to avoid written text. To my knowledge they still have them as I now work elsewhere.
I struggle reversing our caravan, you Sir are a genius! Your steering and visual awareness of space is amazing! You are a credit to your profession. Without guys like you doing what you do, we as consumers would not have products to buy, so from a very grateful customer, thank you ❤
I have every admiration and respect for these drivers, they are expected on a daily basis to manipulate our pathetic congested road system with those huge trucks that carry everything the population needs. I’m not a trucker and could never do their job, they need everyone’s respect. A big 👏 for all truckers.
I dont miss that feeling of nervousness when going to new drops and not knowing the way in or out. Hung up my keys at 53 and live on less than a weeks wage for a month now and dont regret it one bit.
Wow, tell me about it! There’s been so many occasions where I’ve shown up and shocked the people waiting for deliveries. Since they don’t read the delivery manifesto,they always expect a 3,5 ton white van and there I am in a 50 ton 17 meter’s and 4,3 meters high, they’re blown away! Not to mention the waste of time that isn’t theirs, causing stress for the rest of the day! Those city trailers follow nicely, but when reversing around corners they seem to oversteer and usually there’s a pole sitting nicely in the corner to wrap the trailer around! Nice video explaining and showing the daily troubles we face- it’s not just the highway and eating schnitzel at the truck stop as some are thinking and believing! Keep up the great work!
Just come across your channel. Surprisingly entertaining. I own a small furniture store and we get daily deliveries. We’ve found that the delivery guys are in a class of their own; sympathetic, calm and just plain nice people - in a world of so few.
I used to work in a shopping centre. The front on the building, the public part, was one postcode, on a pedestrianised area. The delivery door, on the street, was another postcode. People always forgot to go give the delivery door postcode. Lots of angry delivery drivers.
I always appreciate drivers in such big vehicles and when driving in my car if I'm behind them I will always give them way more room so just make their lives a little bit easier not sure if it actually does anything but just in case.
I'm just waiting to get my class one licence back. It's been 15 years since I last drove and I'm anxious about driving again, but watching your videos and remembering the sinking sensation when you see the place you need to be, then getting through it and the satisfaction afterwards is putting me in a much better mood.
I definitely don't have the temperament for your job at times like this. I'm bad enough when I'm driving a car in a strange town but driving an artic would totally infuriate me. Well Done on your perseverance. 👍🌟
Love it, even some of the stuff we get in delivery van is almost impossible. Can't imagine how hard it is for you guys. Especially here, good job for the rear steer. Don't know if it would help you out. But what3words is sooo bloody useful for this stuff.
Well done for keeping your cool mate, I do store deliveries and we go to some crazy places as well, they really don't think about deliveries when they build these places.
@@01jvb The buildings were....but the M.O. of Pondland is not suitable for such locations. They need warehouse space out-of-town and deliver the goods to their outlets with smaller vehicles.... He probably dropped a couple of cages at each drop....and burnt enough fuel to have done a long distance run to John O'Groats! The logistics need better foresight and planning....That's what computers are for. Managers who cannot manage....therein lies the problem.
here is a tip for you, when u turn with a city trailer with 1 - 2 - 3 axles stay close to the curb you are turn (fx when you are turning left stay to the left etc) and when reversing dont jack knife the truck so much that the steeraxle cant straighten up edit: and remember to check places you have not been before on google maps, so you are kinda prepared for where you are goin ps i drive groceys aswell in denmark copenhagen so i drive with a lot of city trailers in the city aswell as 3 axle trailers love your vids and keep up the good work
The moment you said you was on store deliveries and you had a rear wheel steer trailer I knew you was going to encounter some challenging reverses as I've been in the exact same position. But you survived it and now have better knowledge for the next time.
WELL DONE Lincoln is very difficult to get around in an artic ( I know I’ve done it also I live there )I’m going to presume the trailer was an urban shortie and as you said rear steer the cars at the first drop should not of been there And with you being a euro guy it’s double difficult ( I did European work for several years ) you are always going to get stressed when manoeuvring in tight spaces with other vehicles about so well done again
When delivering somewhere new, I always go onto Google maps and zoom into the location to find the best way in. When I find the name of the street which leads to the delivery point, I find it on the satnav and set it as my destination. Post codes are okay for finding the general location but usually take you to the front door.
Love your vids Raul, but ditching the route card the office gave you and then using your satnav and blaming the instructions... good one. Before satnavs you wrote out your own route cards (written instructions) M6 - off at Jnc 18, follow the A8 until signpost for, at the 2nd roundabout, etc, etc... saved you having to look at a map every 10 mins. Usually rang the client on the best route in before I set of to complete the card...
Anxiety watching this ...I'm relatively new at class one and I think I would have freaked out in that situation haha ...well done mate I am in awe of your driving skills
@@alrightdave6135 I Know it doesn't work that way mate, when someone makes a comment like mine, it is thinking in an alternate and utopic world!!!!!! If transport managers did they job correctly it would be something enjoyable to do, but most of them just want to get the bloody wages and fuck the rest
Those shops are in a historic town where the buildings were probably built 100 years ago in streets 300 years old. There's nothing that can be done with the access - but the deliveries need to be done in smaller trucks.
@@01jvb I take your point...but that place of the first drop had been rebuilt fairly recently...that was all "new "brickwork. And does not help that people ignore parking restrictions and just dump their cars where it suits them. That occurred at both locations.
How Traffic Planners cant use more than one way of giving directions/instructions is beyond me, we have so many apps now, like what3words for a precise loading location etc, its not rocket science. I dont envy store delivery drivers one bit, ill stick to the tippers (8 wheeler) , plus in my area we get paid more than most class 1 drivers (West Yorkshire)
Trouble is most of these streets in Lincoln were built a long time ago, very narrow suitable for horse and carts at one time, but never designed/built for 40-44 toners.
We've got a store where the enforcement officers are told explicitly to wait for us to turn up and give us a ticket, as we get there during parking/loading restrictions. The company just pay the ticket without question.
Those rear steer trailers look difficult to master. I imagine it would be like re learning all the basics that are ingrained into you already. A new challenge
Was the same at B&M Long Eaton. We had a reputation as one of the worst tips. Didn't help that the idiots in transport would try and send the wagons down 2 or 3 hours early and then they'd have to sit and wait until the store was closed and the parking restrictions were over.
I did distribution style jobs too, but instead of city/town centres I went to farms and terminals at the middle of nowhere, but these are just as "hard" as these local shops because at night you have no idea where is the entrance, where are your goods, where is the forklift, or even which building is the one where you supposed to go. Everybody went home and the clock is ticking. But once you managed to find everything then the next time it will be easy peasy.
What a stressful job that is i would need my own bodywork team to put right all the panels and paint that I've ruined. Fair play to these drivers they never know what they're going to till they get there a lot of the time.
Love store work, not doing it at the moment but would love to again in the future, id say to any new pass throw yourself into store work, theres alot of weekend work but theres alot of different shift patterns and shifts are generally short and no day is the same 👍👍👍
if all those cars weren't parked on the double yellows it would have been easy. town planning does put enought free parking in towns and this is what happens
Marvelous driving. It's frightening how many things you've got to be watching. Shame the shops don't have someone to come out to keep pedestrians away & guide you in. Why don't drivers get given coordinates for the delivery gate? I assumed that would be standard. Post codes are so vague.
@Raul689 That just seemed like a nightmare to me, I have nothing but respect for you and other truck drivers. And I don't blame truckers from running away from that job, I would too. I've only ever driven in games such as ATS and ETS2, and even then I shy away from blind reversing and tight places, which of course are no where near as tight as real life.
Sometimes I wish places would have more restrictions. I went into a small village in Somerset and the locals made a chicane out of cones and a fake weight limit sign because they were sick of lorries getting stuck there.
From a Trucker to a trucker thats the shit! i avoid to work mate. all the best. Hated it, co ops same situation. But good one mate highly skilled work that is,
It's a fun job this is. Mine is a bit more easy am on fridge trailers, but only do Aldi and Lidl RDCs, not multidrop or store delivery. But it does look fun. Would like to try it.
I do wish companies, when they do risk assessments on these stores, would let a experienced driver do the assessment, that way he/she would give the best & sarest way for delivery. I worked for Argos & was delighted when I got my 'delivery pack' & it contained a risk assessment of every delivery I had on, until another driver told me head of H R did all the assessments & had never driven an HGV.
I do love a rear stear & don't get to drive one much these days Always remember though if they've given you one it's usually because you're going to need it like really tight you know lol x
Had my HGV class 2 years ago, before all the extra red tape, sat Navs, did all sorts, multi drop, skips,dustcarts, timber, kitchens and bathrooms. Hated everymoment on the roads, . Went and got my Telescopic Licence. Been in construction for nearly 30 years. I earn £200 a day, Start at 8 finish 4.30ish.paid 10 hrs a day. And i can have a beer every night!! Management is shit everywhere you go! Just keep smiling lads and lasses. Buy a lottery Ticket!!😂
Had a One Below store delivery into Luton centre last year.. absolute bastard nightmare...had to park up on double yellows.. luckily a traffic warden took pity and gave me time to pop into the actual shop, ended up asking a store employee to show me the way into the centre/pedestrianised section to deliver... nightmare
Some of the worst considerations for delivery trucks. When they planned it they must have thought horse & cart were still the means by which goods are delivered.
Yep, most of those old roads in Lincoln were built in the days of horse and carts, no way to make them any bigger or wider in a city were building space is at a minimum.
Its not an air show....its a regular thing above Lincoln n, the Red Arrows are based just outside the city and practice regularly over the city. I totally sympathise with you delivering in Lincoln....its one of those places where, if you've never been, you'll struggle. Sat navs are virtually useless in the city as delivery points are rarely where you'd expect them
In my experience agency lads always got the s***y end of the stick, the regular drivers got the cream. I was tasked with a delivery in the centre of Chester on Saturday afternoon during easter weekend, it was so stressful I nearly abandoned the waggon where it was, turned out this delivery is normally done at 3am due to location but the load was delayed so they gave it to the agency driver as their own lads knew it was almost impossible. Thankfully got work with a reputable company where agency lads were treated with respect
I can feel the pain of the daily delivery drivers trying to deliver to stores that are located in small roads or if they are big roads, loadsss of weirdly parked cars.
Hgv driving is like nursing - so mamy differemt companies and jobs. Best is to start and try diffeemt ones until you find the one you like. I use maps, i alwasy check around truck with own eyes . Eletronic aids are an aid and bo excuse in court when judge asks: have you checked? 😅
RANT ALERT FOR NEW PASSES 🚨
When I passed my test I jumped straight into store deliveries and I’ll be completely honest I cried my first week. The stress of some of these places…city centres with a double decker at 9am, rush hour in full swing with no experience. It was so stressful.
But my advice to anyone looking to drive is to go head first into it. Do the tight city centres, do the blindside revering into alleyways, have the arguments with people in cars and I guarantee you’ll become a better driver than most. Complacency is a terrible thing and I couldn’t imagine anything worse than driving up and down the same stretch of the M6 every day and knowing every pot hole delivering to the same place.
7 years into the job and every day is near different, worked for different companies (retail/supermarkets) and I’d advise new pass drivers to go into that sector.
However, the pay has got a lot better but the planning hasn’t. And if planning send you to a place you’re unsure of and feel there’s some sinister motive behind it being kept from you, then speak to other drivers, union reps or have a look yourself on google for restrictions for time etc. Never be embarrassed or scared to say no to a job if you feel like you’re not safe to do it. And most importantly, know the route you’re going. If a diversion happens that’s unforeseeable but use your truck sat nav and use street view on Google to know exactly where a service yard is and how to get into it. Map instructions have often been done by some driver trainer who’s 30 years into his time at the place, just wants to retire and waltz’s up in a pool car and draws a sketch that’s inaccurate at best. So plan accordingly yourself.
And finally in my rant, anyone who wants to do their HGV licence but is put off by the negativity, I say get your licence anyway. The same people moaning on TH-cam are the same people who moan before they even walk through the door into work before they even know what they’re doing for the day. The same people who moan about the job but have conveniently been at the same company for 20 years instead of going somewhere else.
Make the job work for you, not the other way around. Do agency work and find what works for you. I’ve done Tuesday-Saturday for years, home every night and work no more than 48 hours a week. 44k a year. Earn more or less, do more or less, that’s the beauty of agency work. Don’t be put off, if it’s what you want to do… do it and good luck!
Thank you so much for your rant, it’s honestly the most helpful comment I’ve ever read on trucking. I’m 19, currently working in a warehouse but I’ve always wanted to get my HGV license. Most people are negative about it and say don’t get into it. But like you’ve just said, make the job work for you! Also great advice about jumping headfirst, I’ve always had that philosophy elsewhere so I can apply that here. Whenever I’ve gone for something I’ve gone straight into the hardest task to get it out of the way, so store deliveries would be a great place to learn the most as a new pass HGV driver. I’m going to attempt to have my HGV license sorted by next summer, it’s quite expensive and I’ve got another few months of saving first. But thank you so much for your rant and helpful words, honestly so helpful!
i was in the same spot when starting out, and i most certiantly agree with your point of becoming a better driver, now i do long haul and i love it, never going back to distribution work ever again
44k a year? Damn I need to start becoming a truck driver :D
I’ve done class one for 30 years plus you must be on a long break 45 min to write all of that 😂😂😂😂😂
@@smokharn3699 I know people making 40k driving FLT for four nights a week (40 hours tops) and quite a bit more if they work weekends too. True enough that's the top end of the pay scale for forkies unlike in HGV trucking.
@antm2296 Not wanting to drive in circles around the same warehouse every day forever - even for 40k - I just passed my C+E licence but haven't earnestly started looking for jobs yet. I'm definitely not against difficult work in whatever form, but as my very first HGV job, I just don't have the confidence to try this. Hats off to you. A few months in, maybe.
I do like your videos especially the way your showing yourself maneuvering etc I like it and just the general day really. Keep it up
Glad you like them!
Before I retired I did lock and drop for Iceland. When I asked if the store directions could be improved and made suggestions as to how I was told, "Well you know where it is now!" I pointed out that it wasn't for my benefit but for the next poor sod who was sent there!
I suspect that most companies take a similar attitude...
Most of these drops were not designed for artics, but they still get sent to them. It's only the skill of the drivers that get the dispatchers out of trouble with type of deliveries.
Not the places to be honing your reversing skills at all. Master it and then try it, if that floats your boat. Me, I'd rather avoid at costs, even if I can do it, it's aggravating so why entertain it. It only takes a moment's lapse of concentration to scrape someone's Merc and ruin your week. Nah, big yards and easy loading bays or dropping your trailer in a services park is much better,
Raul you are definitely an experienced driver. IMO what makes the driver a professional driver is not just the ability to get into tight spaces. It is to do it calmly, safely and with the confidence like you have. The self control is very impressive and this is what makes you a pro. Thanks for the videos.
And have the ability to complain about it in such a way that non drivers can understand, sounds petty, but it's a bloody skill. Can't be easy some of the stuff he does. Some of it looks like it'd be tricky in a van
Giving me anxiety just watching you! I had a couple of really bad turns and a dead end yesterday, I wasn’t even sure I could get out of one of them but it worked out with a bit of shunting and patience.
Nice piece of driving Raul. I worked for a company who's maps were awful and we had lots of drivers who's first language wasn't English. I took some photo's of drop/collection points and landmarks nearby and a basic last mile Google maps ( I figured a sat nav would get them close enough ) . I then made an one page guide with arrows added for left and right to avoid written text. To my knowledge they still have them as I now work elsewhere.
I struggle reversing our caravan, you Sir are a genius! Your steering and visual awareness of space is amazing! You are a credit to your profession. Without guys like you doing what you do, we as consumers would not have products to buy, so from a very grateful customer, thank you ❤
Thanks 👍
Believe it or not I struggle with my caravan on times. I drive an artic for a living and it's far easier to reverse a large trailer to a caravan
@@stevehearse2141 it’s weird isn’t it. I used to drive coaches for a living & I found reversing a coach easier than a car 🤷♂️😂
You definitely earned your wages that day driving in that area !!! Well done 👍👍
I have every admiration and respect for these drivers, they are expected on a daily basis to manipulate our pathetic congested road system with those huge trucks that carry everything the population needs. I’m not a trucker and could never do their job, they need everyone’s respect. A big 👏 for all truckers.
I dont miss that feeling of nervousness when going to new drops and not knowing the way in or out. Hung up my keys at 53 and live on less than a weeks wage for a month now and dont regret it one bit.
Raul you crack me up mate. The way you laugh at the situations, I'd be shouting for England in a language unheard of. Well done, keep it up mate
Skilful driving, especially tight reversing by those cars, amazed that artics can go into those tight city centre streets, great job 👍🏻
yes they can,with rear steer or baby trailers.If was with my trailer you'll see buildings missing they balconies and cars moved a bit :))
@@DAlan2986 is this 1 rear steerable? Doest it hv that R-L anomaly??
@@rubbersidedown7992 1:10 he explains the trailer ;)
@@DAlan2986 i checked. Thnx
Actually i hd skip watched it.
It’s likely to be an urban short trailer and as was mentioned rear steer which makes them turn way easier no cutting corners or rear swing
Wow, tell me about it! There’s been so many occasions where I’ve shown up and shocked the people waiting for deliveries. Since they don’t read the delivery manifesto,they always expect a 3,5 ton white van and there I am in a 50 ton 17 meter’s and 4,3 meters high, they’re blown away!
Not to mention the waste of time that isn’t theirs, causing stress for the rest of the day!
Those city trailers follow nicely, but when reversing around corners they seem to oversteer and usually there’s a pole sitting nicely in the corner to wrap the trailer around! Nice video explaining and showing the daily troubles we face- it’s not just the highway and eating schnitzel at the truck stop as some are thinking and believing! Keep up the great work!
Being from Lincoln, I know the pain. Even driving round in a car is terrible!
🤣🤣... So true.
Just come across your channel.
Surprisingly entertaining.
I own a small furniture store and we get daily deliveries. We’ve found that the delivery guys are in a class of their own; sympathetic, calm and just plain nice people - in a world of so few.
I used to work in a shopping centre. The front on the building, the public part, was one postcode, on a pedestrianised area. The delivery door, on the street, was another postcode. People always forgot to go give the delivery door postcode. Lots of angry delivery drivers.
You are the coolest, calmest trucker I've ever watched mate. Great driving.
I always appreciate drivers in such big vehicles and when driving in my car if I'm behind them I will always give them way more room so just make their lives a little bit easier not sure if it actually does anything but just in case.
I'm just waiting to get my class one licence back. It's been 15 years since I last drove and I'm anxious about driving again, but watching your videos and remembering the sinking sensation when you see the place you need to be, then getting through it and the satisfaction afterwards is putting me in a much better mood.
Well done what a driver. You make it look so easy. Great videos REALY enjoying them
Glad you like them!
Raul is magnificent. He has amazing skills and is super gorgeous handsome too.
The hell that is Lincoln city centre artic deliveries. Well done.
I definitely don't have the temperament for your job at times like this. I'm bad enough when I'm driving a car in a strange town but driving an artic would totally infuriate me. Well Done on your perseverance. 👍🌟
So tight those areas and inches from cars. Impressive work maneouvering👍
Stress! Nice job, your commentry is hilarious.
Love it, even some of the stuff we get in delivery van is almost impossible.
Can't imagine how hard it is for you guys.
Especially here, good job for the rear steer.
Don't know if it would help you out. But what3words is sooo bloody useful for this stuff.
Well done for keeping your cool mate, I do store deliveries and we go to some crazy places as well, they really don't think about deliveries when they build these places.
No, they didn't think about deliveries in trucks because deliveries were done by horse and cart when this historic town was built !
@01jvb poundland wasn't built when horse and cart was used though was it 🤣
@@paulwalding81 Actually both Poundland stores in Lincoln were built when horses and carts were being used.
Why would they? Without deliveries they'd cease to exist. Yet deliveries are given zero consideration.
@@01jvb The buildings were....but the M.O. of Pondland is not suitable for such locations. They need warehouse space out-of-town and deliver the goods to their outlets with smaller vehicles.... He probably dropped a couple of cages at each drop....and burnt enough fuel to have done a long distance run to John O'Groats! The logistics need better foresight and planning....That's what computers are for. Managers who cannot manage....therein lies the problem.
4:15 feeling for you, son!
here is a tip for you, when u turn with a city trailer with 1 - 2 - 3 axles stay close to the curb you are turn (fx when you are turning left stay to the left etc) and when reversing dont jack knife the truck so much that the steeraxle cant straighten up
edit: and remember to check places you have not been before on google maps, so you are kinda prepared for where you are goin
ps i drive groceys aswell in denmark copenhagen so i drive with a lot of city trailers in the city aswell as 3 axle trailers
love your vids and keep up the good work
Well done Raul, now you know the two shops in Lincoln.
Just another day in paradise, or camion 😎.
Well driven m8 ✌️
Excellent! Love your energy!
I feel your pain with the ‘fux sake’ repeatedly, I do that regularly with the Argos deliveries
The moment you said you was on store deliveries and you had a rear wheel steer trailer I knew you was going to encounter some challenging reverses as I've been in the exact same position. But you survived it and now have better knowledge for the next time.
Really impressive driving, never know the job was quite this tricky. See why you need the trailer steering!
WELL DONE Lincoln is very difficult to get around in an artic ( I know I’ve done it also I live there )I’m going to presume the trailer was an urban shortie and as you said rear steer the cars at the first drop should not of been there
And with you being a euro guy it’s double difficult ( I did European work for several years ) you are always going to get stressed when manoeuvring in tight spaces with other vehicles about so well done again
When delivering somewhere new, I always go onto Google maps and zoom into the location to find the best way in.
When I find the name of the street which leads to the delivery point, I find it on the satnav and set it as my destination.
Post codes are okay for finding the general location but usually take you to the front door.
Love your vids Raul, but ditching the route card the office gave you and then using your satnav and blaming the instructions... good one. Before satnavs you wrote out your own route cards (written instructions) M6 - off at Jnc 18, follow the A8 until signpost for, at the 2nd roundabout, etc, etc... saved you having to look at a map every 10 mins. Usually rang the client on the best route in before I set of to complete the card...
hahaha that green group truck you passed was me :)
Anxiety watching this ...I'm relatively new at class one and I think I would have freaked out in that situation haha ...well done mate I am in awe of your driving skills
People who design those shops should have to deliver themselves. 100% they would design better places!!!
It doesn't work that way. Detailed delivery instructions/photos is the only way
@@alrightdave6135 I Know it doesn't work that way mate, when someone makes a comment like mine, it is thinking in an alternate and utopic world!!!!!! If transport managers did they job correctly it would be something enjoyable to do, but most of them just want to get the bloody wages and fuck the rest
Those shops are in a historic town where the buildings were probably built 100 years ago in streets 300 years old. There's nothing that can be done with the access - but the deliveries need to be done in smaller trucks.
😂😂😂 Exactly
@@01jvb I take your point...but that place of the first drop had been rebuilt fairly recently...that was all "new "brickwork. And does not help that people ignore parking restrictions and just dump their cars where it suits them. That occurred at both locations.
Is this like an addiction? I wanna try this !!!!😂😂 well done,
How Traffic Planners cant use more than one way of giving directions/instructions is beyond me, we have so many apps now, like what3words for a precise loading location etc, its not rocket science. I dont envy store delivery drivers one bit, ill stick to the tippers (8 wheeler) , plus in my area we get paid more than most class 1 drivers (West Yorkshire)
I can feel your stress Raul, and you did the video too!!🏖️🏝️🌴🙈
How you did that mate, well done.
Absolute insanity hahaha - makes me feel like such a wimp when I complain about having to parallel park 😂
I love the way you say fuck sake and it sometimes sounds like uck sake always makes me laugh 😂😂
You're a brave man, I'd hate that job with a passion 👏👏
What about for £50K?
Raul is so good at squeezing it into tight places
You used to be able to get down that left turn at 2:38. They removed the main road and made it pedestrian only a year or so ago. Very annoying!
I've delivered to this place a few times and it's an absolute joke ! Architects and planning officers need to be held accountable !!!!!
Trouble is most of these streets in Lincoln were built a long time ago, very narrow suitable for horse and carts at one time, but never designed/built for 40-44 toners.
Idiots who allow cars to be parked there … idiots who park there, should be double yellows, with active traffic wardens,
@@peteb5343 couldn't agree more 👍
Some tough drops there, brilliant work though 👌🏼
Always hated store deliveries. Never room to manoeuvre ,Cars everywhere .Traffic wardens waiting to pounce .
Forget it .
We've got a store where the enforcement officers are told explicitly to wait for us to turn up and give us a ticket, as we get there during parking/loading restrictions. The company just pay the ticket without question.
Those rear steer trailers look difficult to master. I imagine it would be like re learning all the basics that are ingrained into you already. A new challenge
It never ceases to amaze me at the mentality of the motorists who think because they pay road tax it entitles them to park wherever they please.🤣🤣
Was the same at B&M Long Eaton. We had a reputation as one of the worst tips. Didn't help that the idiots in transport would try and send the wagons down 2 or 3 hours early and then they'd have to sit and wait until the store was closed and the parking restrictions were over.
You are delightfully entertaining
I did distribution style jobs too, but instead of city/town centres I went to farms and terminals at the middle of nowhere, but these are just as "hard" as these local shops because at night you have no idea where is the entrance, where are your goods, where is the forklift, or even which building is the one where you supposed to go. Everybody went home and the clock is ticking. But once you managed to find everything then the next time it will be easy peasy.
What a stressful job that is i would need my own bodywork team to put right all the panels and paint that I've ruined. Fair play to these drivers they never know what they're going to till they get there a lot of the time.
Nicely done! (drop 1)
Love store work, not doing it at the moment but would love to again in the future, id say to any new pass throw yourself into store work, theres alot of weekend work but theres alot of different shift patterns and shifts are generally short and no day is the same 👍👍👍
Crazy skills Raul. I have an easy job compared to you. Great to see how you 'navigate' through the abandoned cars 😂
if all those cars weren't parked on the double yellows it would have been easy. town planning does put enought free parking in towns and this is what happens
Marvelous driving.
It's frightening how many things you've got to be watching.
Shame the shops don't have someone to come out to keep pedestrians away & guide you in.
Why don't drivers get given coordinates for the delivery gate? I assumed that would be standard. Post codes are so vague.
Yep, some pedestrians are utterly stupid too. They think nothing of walking behind the trailer when you can't see anything.
Good on you, if in doubt get out!
wow well done mate
@Raul689 That just seemed like a nightmare to me, I have nothing but respect for you and other truck drivers. And I don't blame truckers from running away from that job, I would too. I've only ever driven in games such as ATS and ETS2, and even then I shy away from blind reversing and tight places, which of course are no where near as tight as real life.
Sometimes I wish places would have more restrictions. I went into a small village in Somerset and the locals made a chicane out of cones and a fake weight limit sign because they were sick of lorries getting stuck there.
Awesome driving this should all be done in class 2 trucks greedy companies
Sometimes do the park and walk can save a lot of time to check both where finally going +unsure with reverse get out of cab and look.
nice driving.
Loved the video. But man this trucking is hard work
that drop looks more suited to a rigid
lol how is it even allowed. Admire the patience sir, awful situation.
From a Trucker to a trucker thats the shit! i avoid to work mate. all the best. Hated it, co ops same situation. But good one mate highly skilled work that is,
It's a fun job this is. Mine is a bit more easy am on fridge trailers, but only do Aldi and Lidl RDCs, not multidrop or store delivery. But it does look fun. Would like to try it.
I do Maccy D's store deliveries. Reversing into car parks while car drivers try and squeeze past for the drive through. Good fun.
What a stressful job!
Have to admit I used to have to do 3 stores per day in some terrible town centres and I kinda miss it now. May go for it again!
You are the best
I do wish companies, when they do risk assessments on these stores, would let a experienced driver do the assessment, that way he/she would give the best & sarest way for delivery.
I worked for Argos & was delighted when I got my 'delivery pack' & it contained a risk assessment of every delivery I had on, until another driver told me head of H R did all the assessments & had never driven an HGV.
I do love a rear stear & don't get to drive one much these days Always remember though if they've given you one it's usually because you're going to need it like really tight you know lol x
Ironically youtube recommended me one of your vids earlier from 3 years ago titled ''STORE DELIVERY DRIVER? NOT FOR ME'' 😂
It's like cigarettes mate you just can't quit 😄😄
@@Raul689 Don't say that. I quit a year ago 😂
Top pilot skills displayed there @raul689 , hope your getting a premium rate for navigating those side streets 👏
Had my HGV class 2 years ago, before all the extra red tape, sat Navs, did all sorts, multi drop, skips,dustcarts, timber, kitchens and bathrooms. Hated everymoment on the roads, .
Went and got my Telescopic Licence. Been in construction for nearly 30 years.
I earn £200 a day,
Start at 8 finish 4.30ish.paid 10 hrs a day.
And i can have a beer every night!!
Management is shit everywhere you go!
Just keep smiling lads and lasses.
Buy a lottery Ticket!!😂
Had a One Below store delivery into Luton centre last year.. absolute bastard nightmare...had to park up on double yellows.. luckily a traffic warden took pity and gave me time to pop into the actual shop, ended up asking a store employee to show me the way into the centre/pedestrianised section to deliver... nightmare
We've got urban rear steer trailers where I work. Need them for some stores.
The people who park on yellow lines, don't think....they are there for a reason. 😂
Some of the worst considerations for delivery trucks. When they planned it they must have thought horse & cart were still the means by which goods are delivered.
You're quite right -the buildings were built when they were using horse & cart !
Yep, most of those old roads in Lincoln were built in the days of horse and carts, no way to make them any bigger or wider in a city were building space is at a minimum.
Without mentioning any names .
Is the company any good to work for .
Simple yes or no is suffice Raul Cheers mate
Its not an air show....its a regular thing above Lincoln
n, the Red Arrows are based just outside the city and practice regularly over the city. I totally sympathise with you delivering in Lincoln....its one of those places where, if you've never been, you'll struggle. Sat navs are virtually useless in the city as delivery points are rarely where you'd expect them
In my experience agency lads always got the s***y end of the stick, the regular drivers got the cream. I was tasked with a delivery in the centre of Chester on Saturday afternoon during easter weekend, it was so stressful I nearly abandoned the waggon where it was, turned out this delivery is normally done at 3am due to location but the load was delayed so they gave it to the agency driver as their own lads knew it was almost impossible. Thankfully got work with a reputable company where agency lads were treated with respect
Thanks for reminding me never to work for Poundland.
Good job tho.
I like man because it's special design place for mobile phone 😂
I'm a truck driver and this made me nervous 😂
and im worried about my driving test maneuvers 😂
I can feel the pain of the daily delivery drivers trying to deliver to stores that are located in small roads or if they are big roads, loadsss of weirdly parked cars.
Hgv driving is like nursing - so mamy differemt companies and jobs. Best is to start and try diffeemt ones until you find the one you like. I use maps, i alwasy check around truck with own eyes . Eletronic aids are an aid and bo excuse in court when judge asks: have you checked? 😅
Masterclass
Lincoln is a nightmare for its 1 way streets.
MAN you got no fair Dealz on that one..