Cargo van delivery service?

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deezdad

Jackie's cashing in on your wretched disfigurement
Joined
Mar 25, 2005
Messages
1,340
Been contemplating a career change and the thought of driving all over the place has my interest, have many questions of course but first and foremost, any money in it?
 
I dont know about the money, could be good. I traveled the country doing telecommunications and low voltage wiring and tech work for several years, I have been in 26 states. If you are married I would strongly advise against it !! It absolutely sucks being on the road constantly !! I did CCTV/DVR installs for WalMart & Target, Fiber optics and wireless networks for WalMart, Target and Lowes. Various installs for Sears, FedEx, etc. If you are single you will enjoy it for awhile. Good Luck

Bryan
 
Ya been an electrician for almost 20 years just kinda tired of workin with the tools installing etc..this won't happen overnight just tryin to gather some info for now .. My daughter is 18 and out of school and doing her own thing, I'm single so leavin home for a week at a time ain't no big deal to me
 
Ya been an electrician for almost 20 years just kinda tired of workin with the tools installing etc..this won't happen overnight just tryin to gather some info for now .. My daughter is 18 and out of school and doing her own thing, I'm single so leavin home for a week at a time ain't no big deal to me
Understood, I have been a low voltage tech for 24 years...getting to old for this crap.

Bryan
 
I did it for 5 years and it was great all the way till the economy and automakers tanked my advice DONT DO IT.. the money isnt there anymore, youll spent way too much time in truck stops waiting on your next load and dont let these companies blow smoke up ur butt they will promise you the world and wont deliver .....I still got an 06 and an 07 chevy express 2500 both bought new both with over 400,000 miles now.....I drove one and had a driver in another at a different company...I knew 10 guys personally with vans at about 6 different companies and i was the last one of all of them to hang it up...
 
By your avatar are you in the Houston area?
Do you have any kind of networking to get you loads/freight?
Are you hard on a vehicle? Know how to repair/trouble shoot things that might go wrong?

Do you understand how much maintenance, insurance, fuel, daily expense for you might cost? Can you manage the collections as it really isn't a business if you aren't collecting the money. Can you price the service to make money? Who is the competition? Can you go to work for them to learn just what might be involved?
 
I did it for 5 years and it was great all the way till the economy and automakers tanked my advice DONT DO IT.. the money isnt there anymore, youll spent way too much time in truck stops waiting on your next load and dont let these companies blow smoke up ur butt they will promise you the world and wont deliver .....I still got an 06 and an 07 chevy express 2500 both bought new both with over 400,000 miles now.....I drove one and had a driver in another at a different company...I knew 10 guys personally with vans at about 6 different companies and i was the last one of all of them to hang it up...
Thanks for your first hand insight .. Did you keep track of maintenance costs while racking up those kind of miles? Chevy is Coming out with the city express cargo van next year it's a 136 hp 4 cyl. yielding 24 mpg carrys up to 1500 lbs. its a rebadged Nissan nv200 ..
 
By your avatar are you in the Houston area?
Do you have any kind of networking to get you loads/freight?
Are you hard on a vehicle? Know how to repair/trouble shoot things that might go wrong?

Do you understand how much maintenance, insurance, fuel, daily expense for you might cost? Can you manage the collections as it really isn't a business if you aren't collecting the money. Can you price the service to make money? Who is the competition? Can you go to work for them to learn just what might be involved?
Actually I'm from new England the avatar is cuz I was a huge baseball fan when I was a boy in the 70's and 80's n those colors just bring me right back, majority of the punks on the field today couldn't hold the jocks of the players from that era.. Anyways I don't have any answers to your questions that's why I'm inquiring lol except to say I don't have any contacts in the field and your idea of working for someone to get my feet wet is probly a good idea
 
Thanks for your first hand insight .. Did you keep track of maintenance costs while racking up those kind of miles? Chevy is Coming out with the city express cargo van next year it's a 136 hp 4 cyl. yielding 24 mpg carrys up to 1500 lbs. its a rebadged Nissan nv200 ..

Not that a new vehicle wouldnt be nice but for a startup I'd be paying cash for everything until I had my cash flow steady. Payments on some capital expenditures would certainly cut the profit margin. I'd worry about keeping the expenses as small as possible for at least five years, or a time you have contracts that guarantee income to cover the expenses.

Posted from the TurboBuick.Com mobile app
 
I'm not trying to discourage you. I think there is no greater way than to be self employed. Just need to have a solid plan and a solid back up plan and another solid plan with a lot of cash incase the first two plans don't work out.

If you are single obviously you have a greater chance as your expenses could be much lower than if you need to support a family.

Put some stuff on paper and mull it over. Refine it, run it past some people who have their own business. Maybe look for a group either local or on the interwebz to run your ideas past. Very hard to succeed without good plans. Hit the library and the half price book store for some material and do some reading. Lots of ways to succeed and plenty of failure to be had. Just need to avoid the failure if you can.

Posted from the TurboBuick.Com mobile app
 
Heres the thing I use amzoil synthetic in those vans and changed every 25,000 miles I highly recommend the chevy express25/3500 with the 6.0 i bought them new....The 06 nwas my first van and it had a 4.8 the 4.8 isnt bad but it wont tow a trailer very well if you ever decide to use it for that....You want a full size extended van not the small 4 cylinder van that will only hold a single pallet...you will be a lot more versatile..I got those miles doing all my own maintainence on the original motor and one tranny rebuild 450,000 miles between 07 and 2010...4 water pumps one rear end rebuild done by the dealer under warranty a few brake jobs, one alternator ,and other normal maintainence, I kept nice jumper cables,antifreeze a full gas can 2 spare tires, tools a spare aternator,starter, tensioner pulley and serpentine belt..i also kept a air mattress, window blockers , and a power inverter mounted on a battery box with a marine battery inside for running my laptop plus i had sounds lol....

The marine battery came in handy when my alternator went out in new mexico in the middle of nowhere at night...I took my amp wire loose while my buddy was driving still hooked my jumper cables to it and the bolt on the seat to the negative hooked it to the marine battery and watched the needle rise and the headlights brighten..that got us to our destination and a truck stop where i changed the alternator...

The problem is NLM thats the company that has all the gm ford and chrysler freight tied up...and they are close door to any new buisness if your company isnt in with them already they stopped taking people in the 90s All the freight you are gonna find on your own is gonna be scragglers so then you have to go and sub lease to a bigger company, bolt,express1,rodriguez,diamond,tri hours, panther,fed ex and expressway... are all the decent ones there are a few mom n pop places that are good but the rest of them suck.. And if you find one that will let you run your own additional loads they want a piece of the action....There are a lot of rip off artists youll make just enough to fuel the truck and keep working they will fee you to death....I started out making a dollar a mile and when the economy tanked so did the company i worked for and when i signed on elsewhere the rates went bye bye i was getting 70c-90c but the work was still sketchy....

Stay away from the diesel vans esp the ford and the sprinter trucks the maintenance costs will kill you dead...Get either a chevy or ford gas van.... a windshield in a sprinter is $900 at safelite one for my chevy $220..i paid $155 cause i usually bought them two at a time....Trans rebuild in my van $700 i installed it myself my buddies sprinter cost him $3000 +installation......My dads ford diesel van in the background on my avatar broke down a lot i had to tow him home to mich from texas with my van once...Id actually get a 15 passenger and take the seats out cause they have rear air and heat and if you decide to haul people you still can i think its the most universal plus the chevy they come with the composite headlights instead of sealed beams which a definately a plus(i converted mine over PITA) I have a friend that takes old people to their doc appointments and the casino kids to school etc with a van and it seems to be a good buisness according to him....

I haul cars with a dually and a three car trailer now and i like the buisness a lot better got my own authority and company..Im going to try to pay someone haul a single car with the van and put a bike atv/freight in the back to make use of the vans i still own....Idk how well it will work out but hey no nuts no glory!!!! U ship is good for add on freight,yesterdays tractor in the classified need hauled section same thing...Heres another good resource
http://www.expeditersonline.com/
HtH Self employed is awesome and theres $ out here Just dont overspend or dive in without doing ur research first..... Heres where the most of the car haulers go http://www.centraldispatch.com/
 
Heres the thing I use amzoil synthetic in those vans and changed every 25,000 miles I highly recommend the chevy express25/3500 with the 6.0 i bought them new....The 06 nwas my first van and it had a 4.8 the 4.8 isnt bad but it wont tow a trailer very well if you ever decide to use it for that....You want a full size extended van not the small 4 cylinder van that will only hold a single pallet...you will be a lot more versatile..I got those miles doing all my own maintainence on the original motor and one tranny rebuild 450,000 miles between 07 and 2010...4 water pumps one rear end rebuild done by the dealer under warranty a few brake jobs, one alternator ,and other normal maintainence, I kept nice jumper cables,antifreeze a full gas can 2 spare tires, tools a spare aternator,starter, tensioner pulley and serpentine belt..i also kept a air mattress, window blockers , and a power inverter mounted on a battery box with a marine battery inside for running my laptop plus i had sounds lol....

The marine battery came in handy when my alternator went out in new mexico in the middle of nowhere at night...I took my amp wire loose while my buddy was driving still hooked my jumper cables to it and the bolt on the seat to the negative hooked it to the marine battery and watched the needle rise and the headlights brighten..that got us to our destination and a truck stop where i changed the alternator...

The problem is NLM thats the company that has all the gm ford and chrysler freight tied up...and they are close door to any new buisness if your company isnt in with them already they stopped taking people in the 90s All the freight you are gonna find on your own is gonna be scragglers so then you have to go and sub lease to a bigger company, bolt,express1,rodriguez,diamond,tri hours, panther,fed ex and expressway... are all the decent ones there are a few mom n pop places that are good but the rest of them suck.. And if you find one that will let you run your own additional loads they want a piece of the action....There are a lot of rip off artists youll make just enough to fuel the truck and keep working they will fee you to death....I started out making a dollar a mile and when the economy tanked so did the company i worked for and when i signed on elsewhere the rates went bye bye i was getting 70c-90c but the work was still sketchy....

Stay away from the diesel vans esp the ford and the sprinter trucks the maintenance costs will kill you dead...Get either a chevy or ford gas van.... a windshield in a sprinter is $900 at safelite one for my chevy $220..i paid $155 cause i usually bought them two at a time....Trans rebuild in my van $700 i installed it myself my buddies sprinter cost him $3000 +installation......My dads ford diesel van in the background on my avatar broke down a lot i had to tow him home to mich from texas with my van once...Id actually get a 15 passenger and take the seats out cause they have rear air and heat and if you decide to haul people you still can i think its the most universal plus the chevy they come with the composite headlights instead of sealed beams which a definately a plus(i converted mine over PITA) I have a friend that takes old people to their doc appointments and the casino kids to school etc with a van and it seems to be a good buisness according to him....

I haul cars with a dually and a three car trailer now and i like the buisness a lot better got my own authority and company..Im going to try to pay someone haul a single car with the van and put a bike atv/freight in the back to make use of the vans i still own....Idk how well it will work out but hey no nuts no glory!!!! U ship is good for add on freight,yesterdays tractor in the classified need hauled section same thing...Heres another good resource
http://www.expeditersonline.com/
HtH Self employed is awesome and theres $ out here Just dont overspend or dive in without doing ur research first..... Heres where the most of the car haulers go http://www.centraldispatch.com/
Damn, thanks for all that .. Gonna save this post for reference!
 
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