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Almost fell off my flippin chair laughing, Tony Daniel at FLS offered this one up.
Welland, ON to Charlotte, NC -- Full load, skidded, 44K for a flat, rolltite or step, needs tarps for a whoppin$1,100.00 !!!!!!!!!! I couldn't drive my pick up down there for that, even with a good tailwind!!! lmao
The best carriers don't use the link. You get what you pay for.
And the point is???
A truck/carrier has the same operating costs no matter which way it is going.
Head-haul and back-haul rates were the age of the dinosaur. The industry did it to themselves but it's time load brokers come in to the
21st century.
It's ok to sell freight for zip when you get your 20% for making a 10 minute phone call. What about the stress and b/s a driver (the guy that actually does the work) has to put up with dealing with impossible promises, incomplete transportion paperwork, weather, customs and traffic?
Rates should not be any different. A load od t/p from Toronto to Chicago should be rated the same as load of t/p from Chicago to Toronto.
It's the same mileage, same borders, same routings but for some reason load brokers figure outbound fuel costs 60% less.
I'm not too sure you are exactly correct there Buzzy. You see, when you look at the globe, travelling from Canada to the United States is definitely down hill. Now I'm no mathematician, but it appears to me that it is down hill at a pretty steep angle. Well, it only stands to reason that a truck travelling on such a long and steep down hill grade would use very little fuel, if any at all. Ergo, the shipper shouldn't have to pay for fuel you aren't going to use.
I do hope that in some small way I have been able to help you understand "Canada-US Transport Economics 101"
That was a joke right? Driving to Chicago is down hill and Toronto is up hill?
Here's a nice cheap load, CH calls today looking to move a TL 44,000 lbs from Toronto to Boston area he offers $1200 almost shit myself, who in this industry is moving freight for this kind of money.
that doesn't seem so bad!