Monday, October 7, 2013

Drastically Extend the Oil Drain Intervals for Your Rig


Every mile counts. As a hauler you probably hear and say that often. Miles are money, and when you can keep rolling, instead of paying for yet another oil drain - in money and downtime; those miles can pay for more of what you really want.

So, how do you go about extending your rig’s oil life? If you’re like some, you keep idling to a bare minimum. Others depend on advanced formula oils, and expensive synthetics that extend the life of the oil with formulation and additives. While this works, to a certain degree, still others have found a way to keep from draining their oil unless absolutely necessary. The key to long oil life is an oil bypass filter.

Oil bypass filters (OBF) are a proven way to keep your oil clean and dramatically reduce the wear on your engine. This isn’t new technology. Having been around for close to twenty years, this is an established equipment system you can use to make more money in the field immediately. Haulers using oil bypass filters change their oil infrequently and still have the maximum protection from their oil. Oil’s life is dependent on just how badly contaminated the oil becomes. It tends to gather any number of pollutants throughout its usable life - soot, fuel, metals and moisture. All of which can considerably shorten that oil life, and the life of your engine.  An oil bypass filter virtually eliminates those contaminants because it puts your oil through a filter the removes particles down to 1 to 3 microns, and evaporates others so they don’t reduce the oil viscosity. This is far superior to only having a factory installed full flow filter, which only filters down to 20 to 25 microns. Even particles that size can damage your rig’s engine.

The OBF works in conjunction with your standard full flow filter; not in place of it, so there is no loss in oil pressure.  Typically, an OBF will filter about 6 gallons of oil per hour, and is connected to the engine oil supply downstream of the standard engine oil filter. In turn, the oil is treated by the bypass filter system and gravity fed back into your oil pan. It has a separate housing for the filter unit, with a replaceable filter medium, as well as a heat chamber to evaporate fuel and moisture from the oil; thus removing even more contaminants that can affect the ability of your oil to reduce friction.

Oil Bypass Filters to 1 micron

It is an additional piece of equipment to buy for your rig, and you will have to purchase and replace your filter at certain intervals. Additionally, you will have to have your oil tested to maintain the best possible oil condition. You will find, however, that oil testing and filters are readily available at the maintenance facilities you’re probably near on a consistent basis.

The system, on average, should pay for itself in under a year with the benefits of extended oil drain intervals, reduced oil purchases, reduced waste oil costs and reduced rig downtime. That said, this system seems like a no-brainer. So, keep your oil cleaner, rack up those miles, and spend your cash on something besides oil.


Keep safe, and keep rolling.

East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales
2906 Elmhurst Lane
Portsmouth, VA 23701
800-849-2178


#eastcoasttruckandtrailer

Check out our web specials, too. 

Our most popular web specials.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

ECTTS.Com

Make an Additional $50,000.00 a Year From Your Rig!

Everyone wants to make more money at their job, but very few people have the opportunity to give themselves a $50,000.00 raise per year. You, as an owner/operator of a tractor trailer, have that opportunity. You’ve probably heard any number of these recommendations before, but we’ve put them all together - and done the math. If you want results, some bad habits need to be broken and some equipment needs to be installed. Let’s start with 5 realistic ways you can make much more money with your rig.

Stop Idling!

You and I both know drivers that have bad habits. First, there’s idling.  Of the 24 hours available, 11 are over the road and the other 13 are consumed idling – usually just for convenience. While there are any number of reasons to reduce idling as much as possible, including laws in some states, consider this:

·         Idling reduces the useful lifetime of your oil. You have a standard lifetime of around 600 hours of operation for over-the-road driving with each oil change. Continuous idling can reduce that to a mere 150 hours! How much are you paying for a standard oil change? How often do you want to be paying for one?  Idling at around 625 RPMs allows for buildup of unburned fuel on the cylinder liners, which is drawn in by the oil sump. This contaminates the oil and shortens the life of the fluid as a lubricant. You’re now paying for more oil changes, more fuel and more engine maintenance; this is your money lost. Even if you choose a higher idling rate to combat some of the oil contamination, you’re now using even more fuel to idle, and you’re still paying more for maintenance, so your costs are still piling up.

·         You’re not making money from your fuel if you’re idling.  Drivers want to drive. That’s how money is made, but there are mandatory down times. What your truck is doing while on that down time is where your money is going; especially since a one-man driver is on downtime more than driving time every single day. Some drivers think of it as a necessary evil, and create the most comfortable environment possible while burning up to a gallon of diesel an hour. That’s almost $50.00 per day in fuel that’s not making you money. Multiply that by the average truck work year, and that’s around $14,000.00. Stop idling unless absolutely necessary and you start making more money.  



·         So, what do you do about it? Install a small generator that runs from your fuel tank, or a separate tank. You can have a very comfortable cab, as well as run your electrics from a small, very efficient generator. There are also electric plug-ins available at numerous truck stops and rest areas, so drivers can be comfortable in any weather, and the heaters can keep the fluids at start-up temp. It actually takes about 14 hours for an engine and fluids to cool to ambient temperature once the rig is shut down, depending on the outside temperature, so worrying about a cold start usually isn’t the problem. There are a host of other solutions out there as well, from solar, to AC battery solutions that will reduce your idling time significantly.

Break Bad Habits!

Ride with enough drivers and you’ll know most seem to have one or two major fuel wasting habits. The first one is almost always their speed. Yes, the load has to be there on time, and drivers want to get the most miles out of their 11 hours, but what if you knew for a fact that dropping your speed from 75 mph to 65 mph would make you $18,000.00 more per year in fuel savings? That’s right; by dropping an average of 10 mph, drivers can gain as much as 1 additional mpg. The difference between the maximum fuel economy RPM and the maximum horsepower RPM range can be as small as 200 RPM. Find out the range for your truck, and take advantage of it. If your average is 6 mpg, plug in 7 mpg to your yearly fuel usage, and see how much more you can make with your truck/fleet just by slowing it down some.

Another bad habit is running out of the top gear.  If you are in the top gear less than 90% of the time, you’re paying for it. Poor shifting habits make for huge losses in fuel. Ten percent less time in the top gear translates into 0.5% mpg losses. And, of course, there’s sudden stopping and fast acceleration to make matters worse. How bad is it? There’s a 30% loss of fuel mileage associated with poor driving habits when a driver exhibits all bad habits at once. Let’s see how that translates into what you could be making. Using our average mileage for an OTR rig of about 6 MPG, with a 30% loss for poor driving, that makes it in the neighborhood of 4.8 MPG. How much do you save with good driving habits? Conservatively, about $30,000.00 per year if you compare fuel usage at each of those values for one year.

You’ll notice we’re well above the $50,000.00 mark at this point, and there’s still more to come. So why am I giving you a lower estimate? Not all drivers, or all trucks, exhibit all of the same problems. Some have good driving habits, but poor idling behaviors; others, vice versa. Still more problems can be isolated to the equipment itself. Which brings us to…

Update Your Equipment!

With the exception of poorly maintained equipment, of all the things that make a truck expensive to operate, the lack of aerodynamics can be one of the worst. If your truck/fleet is still hauling without improvements in aerodynamics, you need to do a cost analysis on the return this equipment provides.

The highest estimate for updating your truck with aerodynamic equipment is that it can add up to 12% to your MPG. That takes your mileage from 6 MPG to 6.76 MPG, with a fuel savings of around $14,000.00 per year. Yes, you will spend several thousand dollars for an upgrade, but that’s a one-time investment that pays you again, and again, over the life cycle of the rig. Additionally, not every upgrade is available for every type of rig, so your results are going to vary with the amount of aerodynamics you can, or do, install. Some equipment you might want to review includes:

A Trailer Gap Reducer and Trailer Side Skirts
A Trailer Boat Tail and Trailer Side Skirts
Advanced Trailer End Fairing
Advanced Trailer Skirts
Tractor Aerodynamics  Package

Finally, there are low rolling resistance tires. These tires are already required in California on all tractors, and are a coming requirement for all trailers in that state by 2017. This sounds like bad news, but for the small additional cost of each tire, there are significant returns. Just as the shape of your truck contributes to greater resistance, so does the design of your tire. Low rolling resistance tires can improve your MPG by up to 8%. Again, taking our average rate of 6 MPG, and adding another 8% to the equation gives you around $9,000.00 per year.

If nothing else, this information should help you determine where to begin to start making more money. If we’re being realistic, each item has its own associated expense. If you’re the driver, you’ll have to spend time relearning good driving habits, determining just how much idling you actually have to do, and how much time you are going to spend in down time to do the upgrades on your rig. If you have drivers working for you, you will have training costs; upgrade costs and management expenses to continue a successful program. If you’re interested in making more money from your business, it’s worth it.

East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales
2906 Elmhurst Lane
Portsmouth, VA 23701
800-849-2178

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

MLB Free Pick: Blue Jays Will Extend Rangers Losing Streak - Baseball Betting Preview

Texas is losing steam and losing games without slugger Josh Hamilton. Toronto, minus 165 on the MLB odds board, will continue to give the Rangers fits in Tuesday
The Texas Rangers (75-62, 32-36 road) are in one of their worst slumps of the MLB season, having lost four consecutive games. They are also without their best hitter, outfielder Josh Hamilton, for an extended period due to a rib injury. Their best pitcher, Cliff Lee, is dealing with back issues.
The Toronto Blue Jays (71-66, 37-29 home) will look to extend the Rangers’ woes on Tuesday night at the Rogers Center in the second game of a four-game series. First pitch is scheduled for 7:07 p.m. ET.
Current baseball odds have the Blue Jays listed as -165 favorites. The total is set at nine runs.
In the first game of the series on Monday afternoon, the Blue Jays blasted the Rangers by a score of 7-2. Vernon Wells had a home run and three RBI for Toronto, which sent Texas to its fourth straight loss. It was also the sixth consecutive win for the Blue Jays over the Rangers, dating back to April 7.
Story continued at MLB Free Pick: Blue Jays Will Extend Rangers Losing Streak - Baseball Betting Preview

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

msaks@ectts.com -
---------
specialized hauling

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling
----------

Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

From The Star
Mark Zwolinski  
Sports Reporter

It’s being called “The Year of the Pitcher.”

Pitchers are dominating in the major leagues this season, and they’re having an effect on the record book as well.

The Jays’ Brandon Morrow joined a growing list of one-hit and no-hit hurlers who have surfaced this season at near record pace.

Already, there are five no-hitters in baseball this year, two shy of the record reached in 1990 and ’91. Ubaldo Jimenez, Matt Garza and Edwin Jackson have each tossed a no-no. The other two, by ex-Jay Roy Halladay and Oakland’s Dallas Braden, were perfect games. There would have been a record three perfect games this season had it not been for an umpire’s blown call in Detroit earlier this season that robbed Armando Gallaraga of perfection.
Morrow’s 17-strikeout masterpiece marked the fourth time this season a pitcher has taken a no-hitter into the ninth (two of those — Morrow’s and Gallaraga’s in Detroit — were lost with two out in the ninth).

Four no-hitters lost in the ninth is not a record — baseball saw eight of them broken in the ninth in 1988 — but the number of strikeouts being tallied these days certainly suggests pitchers are on their game and hitters are still catching up.

Consider the number of combined (both teams) strikeouts per game in the sport at the moment. As of Monday, teams were combining for 13.9 strikeouts.

That number puts the sport on pace for an all-time record in combined strikeouts per game. And if that isn’t enough to suggest pitching is dominating the game, that number has been going up steadily since 2005.
“We as hitters live on mistakes by pitchers, but if (pitchers) are making well executed pitches like they seem to be, then it’s tough to deal with,” Jays centre fielder Vernon Wells said.

“If guys are hitting their spots, then it’s going to be tougher for hitters, no question.”

Wells, like several other stars in the game, agreed the game is seeing an influx of excellent young pitchers who can handle major league hitting from their very first start.

Take Morrow, for instance. Drafted in the first round, fifth overall, by Seattle in 2006, he made his first start in the majors Sept. 5, 2008 and pitched 7.2 innings of no-hit ball against the Yankees.

Afterwards, he bounced between the pen and the starting rotation, and the Mariners — despite his 98 m.p.h. stuff — felt he wouldn’t reach the consistency needed to survive as a big league starter.

Prior to Sunday’s performance, Morrow was 9-9 as a starter with a 4.46 ERA in 37 outings.

Turn the page to his arrival with the Jays this season and Morrow, 9-6 in Toronto, has not allowed a hit through five innings in five of those 37 career starts. Cliff Lee, considered the best pitcher in the American League at the moment, has only four such starts in nine major league seasons.

Baseball experts note several factors in pitching superiority, including the emergence of young pitchers like Morrow who master control over three or four pitches early in their careers. There’s also a renaissance in the sport on defence (Seattle, for instance, won 24 more games in 2009 than 2008 because, in part, they gave up 114 fewer runs); and the crackdown on performance-enhancing drugs to deter power hitters.

Pitchers are also equipped with far more statistical knowledge than their predecessors.

“I can see that . . . we as players kind of listen in on pre-series meetings, and both catchers get together with the starter and try and attack everyone’s weaknesses as hitters,” said Wells.

Indeed, computerized hitting reports and video now centre on as many as 16 hitting zones that can be attacked or exploited.

“The game has really come along in the video department . . . everyone does video now, pitchers and hitters, everyone’s looking for an advantage,” Wells said.

Ultimately, as Wells added, good pitching will beat good hitting every time. And it’s showing itself in the record book.
-------------------------------------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

msaks@ectts.com -
---------
specialized hauling

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling
---------

Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, August 6, 2010

Feschuk: Argos swarmed, but not by Eskies - thestar.com

From The Toronto Star
by Scott Feschuk  
Sports Columnist

As if the Argonauts didn’t have enough to worry about, what with a struggling rookie quarterback running a bottom-of-the-league offence.

Heading into Friday night’s game at Commonwealth Stadium, there’s every chance Toronto’s CFL team won’t get its fourth victory of the season unless it wins a night’s worth of battles, not only against the Edmonton Eskimos but also against one or more of the forces of nature that rule these parts.


- msaks@ectts.com

Andre Talbot is happy to educate his former teammates on the scope of the earthly wrath that could be unleashed come kickoff. Talbot, the Toronto-bred receiver, spent nine years as an Argo before he was dealt here in the off-season.

And five games into his career as an Eskimo, he has already witnessed a lightning delay (which halted last week’s Edmonton win over the B.C. Lions for about 40 minutes) and a series of sunny-day showers (“They just swoop in from nowhere,” marvels Talbot).

And don’t get him started about this summer’s crop of Alberta mosquitos, which appear to be giving Winnipeg’s infamous bloodsuckers a run as the CFL’s wickedest vein-tapping menace.

Who says the hermetically sealed Rogers Centre is bad place for football?

“(The mosquitos) are brutal. It’s unbelievable. I’ve never seen such a swarming,” Talbot said. “Last week on the field, guys were just covered in them.”

Insects aside, Edmonton isn’t known for its ability to mount a swarm.

The 1-4 Eskimos are, in the words of coach Richie Hall, “a fragile team.” And their run defence, in particular, ranks last in the league.

So even if Toronto’s anemic passing game doesn’t escape its half-decade-old rut anytime soon, there’s some reason to believe the Argos could find some salvation on the ground on Friday night.

Cory Boyd, the Toronto running back who put up three 100-yard-plus performances in the season’s first four games, is coming off a subpar effort in a blowout loss to Montreal.

On Thursday, not long after the Argos arrived here after a morning flight, Boyd offered a suggestion for returning to his big-gaining ways.

“I guess we’ve got to feed me a little more, get the running game going early in the game,” said Boyd. “I guess that’s how it always starts and we just go downhill from there.”

If that wasn’t exactly an optimistic take on Toronto’s prospects, it fit the tone of the moment. The Eskimos, five days removed from the firing of general manager Danny Maciocia, weren’t exactly crowing in the wake of their only win of the year.

“You talk about (the Argos) being fragile offensively. We have a fragile football team ... It took us five games into the season before we won our first game,” said Hall, who outlined the Edmonton game plan all the same.

“We want to try and make a team one dimensional, and that means taking away the run. They’ve got a great running back there. He runs hard . . . We’ve given up some yards running. We’ve given up some chunks of yards.”

Boyd, for his part, certainly wasn’t sounding overconfident — disingenuous would be a better word for his press briefing.

First, Boyd, who turns 25 on Friday, claimed he has “never really celebrated a birthday before.”

And even if that sounded plausible, he then claimed to be unaware he is currently leading the CFL in rushing yards.

Boyd, mind you, was standing on the turf at Commonwealth Stadium on Thursday when he spoke to the media, where the mosquitos were enjoying a midday buffet that included sportswriter flank (in plentiful supply) and running back calf.

“Even as I’m speaking, I’m getting (eaten) up in the back of my legs,” he said.

So forgive him if he sounded distracted. Boyd, not long after he preached on the evils of the post-touchdown celebration, also acknowledged that, should the Argos conquer the Eskimos and Mother Nature on Friday night, he just might find time to ring in his personal new year.

“Hopefully, we’ll have a win so I can go out with the fellows, enjoy our time, and just have a little champagne or wine,” said Boyd. “Hopefully, some of the opposing team can come and we can all just make it a family affair.”

If Boyd spends Friday night drinking with the opposing team, he’ll be making like a certain six-legged swiller of vital fluid.

Said Kenneth Pettaway, the Eskimos defensive end: “If I had some advice for the Argos, I’d say: ‘Bring lots of bug spray.’ ”

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling



Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Jays lose Buck and game in Bronx

 From the Toronto Star

NEW YORK—The Blue Jays didn’t blast music in the locker room the way they do after a win, but post-game moping that usually follows a getaway day loss was absent.
The Blue Jays remained remarkably loose for a team that had just lost three times in a single day.
First they lost the game, 5-1 to the Yankees and squandering a chance to sweep the World Series champs on the road.

They also lost the Alex Rodriguez lottery when, after 12 games of waiting and mounting hype, the Yankees third baseman took Shaun Marcum deep for the 600th home run of his career.

Finally, they lost catcher John Buck, who took a Rodriguez foul tip of his right thumb in the fifth inning.
The foul ball’s impact didn’t break bones — and Buck considers himself lucky for that — but it split Buck’s skin, a gash requiring three stitches to close and a few days to heal.

Immediately after the game the Jays placed Buck on the 15-day disabled list, but he hopes to start throwing again well inside that time frame.

“They were able to sew (the skin) right to my thumbnail, so hopefully that will make it heal quicker,” Buck said, his thumb wrapped in bandage. “I can move it and everything. It feels fine. . . . The doctor said as soon as I feel like I can start throwing I can play catch.”

Jose Molina replaced Buck midway through Wednesday’s game but afterward the club announced they will promote highly-rated catching prospect J.P. Arencibia from Triple-A Las Vegas. Arencibia has been touted as the club’s catcher of the future since the Jays drafted him in 2007 and has played well enough in Las Vegas to make Buck pre-deadline trade bait even though the incumbent starting catcher made his first all-star team.
Through Tuesday the 24-year-old Arencibia had played 95 games for Las Vegas, batting .303 with 32 doubles and 31 home runs, most in the minor leagues. His power numbers are even more impressing considering that he hit only eight homers in the first two months of the season.

Arencibia’s arrival will provide a glimpse into the Jays’ future, but halfway through their season series with the powerhouse Yankees the present looks more pleasant than most observers would have predicted.

Instead of limping in the final two months the Jays remain four games over .500. Wednesday’s loss comes after two straight wins at Yankee Stadium and clearly represents a lost opportunity.

But the Jays still lead the season series 5-4, and starting the toughest month on their schedule with a series win over the Yankees tempers the disappointment.

“You always like to win that last one on the way home,” said manager Cito Gaston, “but we’ll take two out of three anytime we can.”




Jays lose Buck and game in Bronx - thestar.com
Enhanced by Zemanta