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Old 08-10-2011, 01:04 PM   #11 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Diesel_Dave View Post
Yeah, there are always going to be people out there who are going to be stupid, but you don't need to outlaw stupid. Natural forces have a tendency to take care of that. If trucking company A spends thousands and thousands more on fuel than trucking company B, company B will have higher profits and grow. company A will loose money and eventually go bankrupt.
Or they lobby Congress to further subsidize the fuel because "ZOMG JOBS" and get out of paying more without having to actually invest in the technology.

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Old 08-10-2011, 01:08 PM   #12 (permalink)
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Brand loyalty in the trucking industry is almost worse than a Ford vs. Chevy debate - not only are they loyal to the brand, but to the class as well. If they've always had a Freightliner Classic, they're going to buy a Freightliner Coronado - even though the Century and Cascadia have the same size cab and sleeper and sport the same engine and transmission. From the inside, with the curtains closed, you can't even tell which truck you're in. Only when you look out over the hood.

Same for KW - they *might* consider a Pete 389 instead of W-900, but that's as far as they're going to get with the thought process.

You will notice that almost no *FLEETS* have pete 389's, KW W-900's, or Freightliner Coronados - they learned years ago that looks are not more important than fuel economy. The square trucks are generally owned by single unit owner/operators that own their own truck. O/O's make up at least 90% of the trucks on the road.

The only way to get these brick-like relics (that are still being made today) off the road is if they're legislated off - or if fuel prices continue skyrocketing.
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Old 08-10-2011, 01:58 PM   #13 (permalink)
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I like the "fuel prices continue skyrocketing" path better. Diesel_Dave has a valid point about companies either becoming more efficient or going bankrupt.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:07 PM   #14 (permalink)
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The problem with skyrocketing fuel prices is that would punish everybody in america, not just the equipment owners that refuse to upgrade to a more efficient vehicle. Enough of these vehicles are on the road that they drive overall freight rates higher just because they suck down more fuel.

I'm not going to say EVERYTHING arrives by truck, but odds are really good that "if you bought it, a truck brought it." Increased fuel prices simply to force companies to buy more efficient trucks are going to be passed through to the trucking company customers, and from them on to you.

We are talking about incredibly stubborn people - they will change their ways when they go out of business, and enough of them have the same mentality about bigger is better that it will be a very long time before someone with a 'brick' will actually be at a disadvantage (because the freight rates will simply raise to pay for the increased fuel cost) - and in the meantime, the extra fuel they're sucking down is getting passed through to YOU.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:13 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Also let me add my thought process to this -
These are vehicles that can cost well over $100,000 even in stripped down fleet configuration, and almost no one keeps them for less than 3 years, with many fleets and o/o's keeping them for 7 to 10 years.

They aren't going to replace them next year because of high fuel costs - they're going to run them until they're paid for, and THEN replace them. To do otherwise is financial suicide. So what happens in the meantime? They burn more fuel. Skyrocketing fuel costs wind up doing nothing more than translating into higher costs for bread and milk at the grocery story, because the trucking company can't just throw out their $100,000 truck because the new one will save fuel - they woudln't be able to afford it.

I'm all for more efficient truck tractors, but making everyone pay more for groceries isn't the way to do it.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:26 PM   #16 (permalink)
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The same can be said for car owners as well. I always laugh at the idiots that trade in their perfectly good 3-5 year old car for a brand new cracker box that also comes with a $15-20k loan, all in the name of "saving money on gas". Obviously these people flunked 1st grade math, as they will *never* recover the cost of the car in gas savings.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:31 PM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by p38fln View Post
The problem with skyrocketing fuel prices is that would punish everybody in america, not just the equipment owners that refuse to upgrade to a more efficient vehicle. Enough of these vehicles are on the road that they drive overall freight rates higher just because they suck down more fuel.

I'm not going to say EVERYTHING arrives by truck, but odds are really good that "if you bought it, a truck brought it." Increased fuel prices simply to force companies to buy more efficient trucks are going to be passed through to the trucking company customers, and from them on to you.

We are talking about incredibly stubborn people - they will change their ways when they go out of business, and enough of them have the same mentality about bigger is better that it will be a very long time before someone with a 'brick' will actually be at a disadvantage (because the freight rates will simply raise to pay for the increased fuel cost) - and in the meantime, the extra fuel they're sucking down is getting passed through to YOU.
Well, like was said earlier, the companies that are more efficient will win out in the marketplace. Diesel has tripled in the past 20 years, and yet, owner-operators have continued to replace their trucks with the same crappy inefficient vehicles and continue (even to this day) to drive them at 80 mph.

Fuel prices will continue to climb as global demand rises, and perhaps if these guys would save up their money instead of spending it on chrome bits and hundreds of side marker lights, they could afford the innovative fuel-saving upgrades that these regulations will no doubt empower the free market to create.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:40 PM   #18 (permalink)
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The same can be said for car owners as well. I always laugh at the idiots that trade in their perfectly good 3-5 year old car for a brand new cracker box that also comes with a $15-20k loan, all in the name of "saving money on gas". Obviously these people flunked 1st grade math, as they will *never* recover the cost of the car in gas savings.
Trucks probably average 100,000 miles a year. Going from 6 mpg to 8 mpg at today's fuel prices saves about $22,000 a year in fuel. You'd have to have a pretty darn new truck for that upgrade to not make sense, and anybody who buys a new 6 mpg truck between now and when the regs go into effect in 2014 deserves to get smacked down by the market.
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:42 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Oh, nothing can be done for market fluctuations forcing the price up - i meant doing dumb things like $5 a gallon tax on diesel fuel
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Old 08-10-2011, 02:42 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by p38fln View Post
We are talking about incredibly stubborn people - they will change their ways when they go out of business, and enough of them have the same mentality about bigger is better that it will be a very long time before someone with a 'brick' will actually be at a disadvantage (because the freight rates will simply raise to pay for the increased fuel cost) - and in the meantime, the extra fuel they're sucking down is getting passed through to YOU.
I'll live with it, then. I'm not about to call for more legislation forcing inefficient rigs off the road, because that leads to even higher costs as truckers pass the cost to the consumer of being forced to buy more efficient rigs. The government regulates too much, as it is.

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