I'd take a look at their SMS scores and then determine whether you want to give them your freight;Looking for a reference on service and communication, looking to give them an LTL
Granted... the OOS% is AND it's based on not many inspections.I'd take a look at their SMS scores and then determine whether you want to give them your freight;
Safety Measurement System - Vehicle Maint. BASIC (U.S. DOT# 3620315)
ai.fmcsa.dot.gov
Fair... but if you're a young carrier with only 3 inspections and one of them put you out of service then you find yourself with a 33% OOS rate.OOS is at 30%, would be a no go for me.
I'd take a look at their SMS scores and then determine whether you want to give them your freight;
Hear hear lets as an industry start policing ourselves we can starve the shitty carriers out all you have to say is load is covered. A month of no loads and the repo depot will be at the door.Fair... but if you're a young carrier with only 3 inspections and one of them put you out of service then you find yourself with a 33% OOS rate.
So the resolution... is to get more inspections.
but when you see violations like loose brake line, tire fabric showing, discharged fire extinguisher, driving beyond 14 hrs. lights out, unsecured cargo... all this stuff (or most of it) is preventable with pre / post trip inspections.
STOP GIVING FREIGHT TO THESE GUYS !
STOP lowering your standards... your companies standards... your customers standards... to gain capacity for a cheap rate.
Use a decent carrier that plays by the rules... pay a fair rate and life all of a sudden gets easier.
... end the ramblings of a grumpy old man.
I do agree. For example, we have not had many inspections. We take care of our equipment however, 1 driver left a greenhouse under construction and as he was leaving ran over 2 large bolts that were dropped somewhere in the yard not even 2 miles down the road he was pulled into a roadside inspection and he failed because the tire was pissing our air. He did inspect before leaving with photos but between A and B that happened. It's a good thing they did pull us over cause it needed to be repaired before hitting the highway but just bad luck. The second driver's truck blew a fuse mid-trip and his trailer brake lights would not engage, was pulled into a scale and of course another OOS for a couple dollar fuse. So our score is pretty bad if you look it up, but in 25 years we have not had many OOS. That being said I agree it is good to look at what they were put OOS for instead of just looking at the number.Fair... but if you're a young carrier with only 3 inspections and one of them put you out of service then you find yourself with a 33% OOS rate.
So the resolution... is to get more inspections.
but when you see violations like loose brake line, tire fabric showing, discharged fire extinguisher, driving beyond 14 hrs. lights out, unsecured cargo... all this stuff (or most of it) is preventable with pre / post trip inspections.
STOP GIVING FREIGHT TO THESE GUYS !
STOP lowering your standards... your companies standards... your customers standards... to gain capacity for a cheap rate.
Use a decent carrier that plays by the rules... pay a fair rate and life all of a sudden gets easier.
... end the ramblings of a grumpy old man.