Swift, just like all the other Company-Sponsored Training Programs are very fast-paced. You'll feel overwhelmed the entire duration of your training. Its best to study the High Road Training Program right now at the comfort of your own home sipping delicious tea and then testing for your permit. This will make your week a little less hectic. Everyone in the classroom will be pulling their hair trying to jam all that information in their head in under a week meanwhile you'll be on cruise control. Definitely get the permit right now.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
A Company-Sponsored Training Program is a school that is owned and operated by a trucking company.
The schooling often requires little or no money up front. Instead of paying up-front tuition you will sign an agreement to work for the company for a specified amount of time after graduation, usually around a year, at a slightly lower rate of pay in order to pay for the training.
If you choose to quit working for the company before your year is up, they will normally require you to pay back a prorated amount of money for the schooling. The amount you pay back will be comparable to what you would have paid if you went to an independently owned school.
Company-sponsored training can be an excellent way to get your career underway if you can't afford the tuition up front for private schooling.
You don't have to get it before applying, but you may want to get it before you begin your schooling. Before you do attend a school, ask them how they handle getting permits. Most of the time the new classes will cram the CDL manual for several days and then they quickly run you to the DMV to take the written exams for the permit before you forget too much. So most of the time it makes sense to get your permit before you attend school.
What you really want to make sure of is that you use our High Road Training Program to prepare for the written exams and the beginning of your schooling. You'll fly through the exams like they're nothing and you'll be way ahead of the rest of the class when school begins.
Here is how our program breaks down:
A pre-trip inspection is a thorough inspection of the truck completed before driving for the first time each day.
Federal and state laws require that drivers inspect their vehicles. Federal and state inspectors also may inspect your vehicles. If they judge a vehicle to be unsafe, they will put it “out of service” until it is repaired.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
A written or electronic record of a driver's duty status which must be maintained at all times. The driver records the amount of time spent driving, on-duty not driving, in the sleeper berth, or off duty. The enforcement of the Hours Of Service Rules (HOS) are based upon the entries put in a driver's logbook.
A vehicle with two separate parts - the power unit (tractor) and the trailer. Tractor-trailers are considered combination vehicles.
Refers to pulling two trailers at the same time, otherwise known as "pups" or "pup trailers" because they're only about 28 feet long. However there are some states that allow doubles that are each 48 feet in length.
The state agency that handles everything related to your driver's licences, including testing, issuance, transfers, and revocation.
I believe the non-permit people take an extra week.
On my first day of Swift's course, they called out the non-permitters, and that's the last I ever saw of them!
Seriously, they called them out, they were not in our class. The extra time is part of Swift's package.
But why take extra time away from home? Get your permit now.
I went to prime after studying this site. The permit in MO was half the price of my home state...so you might want to consider that. I tested the second day at prime and passed on first try
So according to Brett, Pre-Trip inspection is part of the "learner's permit" test? I am cramming currently and was hoping that "pre-trip inspection" was only a part of the actual cdl licensing test, and not the learner's. I guess I am wrong... ok lots more cramming in the next few days LOL!
A pre-trip inspection is a thorough inspection of the truck completed before driving for the first time each day.
Federal and state laws require that drivers inspect their vehicles. Federal and state inspectors also may inspect your vehicles. If they judge a vehicle to be unsafe, they will put it “out of service” until it is repaired.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
So according to Brett, Pre-Trip inspection is part of the "learner's permit" test? I am cramming currently and was hoping that "pre-trip inspection" was only a part of the actual cdl licensing test, and not the learner's. I guess I am wrong... ok lots more cramming in the next few days LOL!
Geoff, I just answered this on your own topic.
A pre-trip inspection is a thorough inspection of the truck completed before driving for the first time each day.
Federal and state laws require that drivers inspect their vehicles. Federal and state inspectors also may inspect your vehicles. If they judge a vehicle to be unsafe, they will put it “out of service” until it is repaired.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
I'm not sure where his other topic is at the moment so I'll just throw this in here. You will have some questions about doing a pre-trip inspection on the written exam for your CDL permit. Then you will do an actual pre-trip inspection on a truck as part of the skills test to get your CDL, unless you're in Texas I'm told where they do not require an actual pre-trip inspection as part of the testing process.
A pre-trip inspection is a thorough inspection of the truck completed before driving for the first time each day.
Federal and state laws require that drivers inspect their vehicles. Federal and state inspectors also may inspect your vehicles. If they judge a vehicle to be unsafe, they will put it “out of service” until it is repaired.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
Errol and Brett, didn't mean to double up on the posts, was just looking for the quickest answer I could get :-). I appreciate both of your replies! Sounds like I need to go ahead and study the "pre-trip inspection" part of the High Road Training before I get to Springfield, MO for my learner's permit. Thank you both
A pre-trip inspection is a thorough inspection of the truck completed before driving for the first time each day.
Federal and state laws require that drivers inspect their vehicles. Federal and state inspectors also may inspect your vehicles. If they judge a vehicle to be unsafe, they will put it “out of service” until it is repaired.
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Should I get my CDL permit before applying to Swift?
CDL:
Commercial Driver's License (CDL)
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles: