I’ve seen trucks from this company several times on the road and at truckstops. Amusing name.
This driver and his dog were at the yard today. St. Bernard and is just a pup. Still growing!
Operating While Intoxicated
This driver and his dog were at the yard today. St. Bernard and is just a pup. Still growing!
Saw a Prime driver being unloaded at a Kroger DC where I was the other day and this driver had 4 large dogs in his truck with him. Inside of that truck must smell terrible.
Operating While Intoxicated
Advanced backing training during month 4 of TNT?
This is a good example of why a driver should G.O.A.L. Those stantions, poles, boulders, walls, and bollards are hard to see, especially after dark.
Prime Inc has their own CDL training program and it's divided into two phases - PSD and TNT.
The PSD (Prime Student Driver) phase is where you'll get your permit and then go on the road for 10,000 miles with a trainer. When you come back you'll get your CDL license and enter the TNT phase.
The TNT phase is the second phase of training where you'll go on the road with an experienced driver for 30,000 miles of team driving. You'll receive 14¢ per mile ($700 per week guaranteed) during this phase. Once you're finished with TNT training you will be assigned a truck to run solo.
Advanced backing training during month 4 of TNT?
This is a good example of why a driver should G.O.A.L. Those stantions, poles, boulders, walls, and bollards are hard to see, especially after dark.
Can somebody explain how that could happen? Was it during backing? I can’t figure it out.
Prime Inc has their own CDL training program and it's divided into two phases - PSD and TNT.
The PSD (Prime Student Driver) phase is where you'll get your permit and then go on the road for 10,000 miles with a trainer. When you come back you'll get your CDL license and enter the TNT phase.
The TNT phase is the second phase of training where you'll go on the road with an experienced driver for 30,000 miles of team driving. You'll receive 14¢ per mile ($700 per week guaranteed) during this phase. Once you're finished with TNT training you will be assigned a truck to run solo.
Extreme inattention would be my guess? Why that pole never bent over, I'll never know, but I do know that's an actual photograph. Perhaps the downhill angle (towards the nose) is lower than the elevation at the tail? That's the only speculative answer I can think of.
This is from the big California snow storm.
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