Repower?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Sixela918, Mar 22, 2022.

  1. Sixela918

    Sixela918 Light Load Member

    256
    395
    Nov 24, 2021
    Phoenix, AZ
    0
    What does repower mean?
     
    Badmon and truckdriver31 Thank this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Kyle G.

    Kyle G. Road Train Member

    3,754
    19,605
    Jan 23, 2016
    Eastern Iowa
    0
    One driver picks up a load and swaps trailers with another driver, then the second driver delivers.
     
    Badmon, truckdriver31 and tscottme Thank this.
  4. Sixela918

    Sixela918 Light Load Member

    256
    395
    Nov 24, 2021
    Phoenix, AZ
    0
    Thank you very much
     
    Badmon, truckdriver31 and Kyle G. Thank this.
  5. truckdriver31

    truckdriver31 Road Train Member

    6,989
    8,352
    Sep 18, 2013
    0
    Loss wages
     
    MM71, DRTDEVL, bryan21384 and 5 others Thank this.
  6. TripleSix

    TripleSix God of Roads

    18,316
    127,950
    Apr 10, 2009
    Copied in Hell
    0
    Winner.
     
  7. Allow Me.

    Allow Me. Trucker Forum STAFF Staff Member

    10,642
    12,100
    May 28, 2009
    Rancho Mirage, Ca.
    0
    Yeah, means load needs to keep moving but the driver is out of hours, so, dispatch gives it to another driver/team that has available hrs.
     
    bryan21384 and tscottme Thank this.
  8. Moose1958

    Moose1958 Road Train Member

    15,090
    33,172
    Dec 17, 2010
    Williesburg, Virignia
    0
    It simply means the load gets "reloaded" to another driver before reaching the final. There are many reasons this can happen. From a driver having an emergency to a driver getting fired. About a month before I retired I picked up a load out of a Truck Stop in Alabama after the driver assigned to it had quit. he abandoned the truck and load. I got the load and another driver, later on, got the truck, and the empty I left.
     
  9. tscottme

    tscottme Road Train Member

    99 out of 100 times when a load is re-powered, the 2 trucks involved simply swap trailers in a parking lot. Some companies routinely use solo drivers to go into crowded cities and get trailer loaded. Then have the solo drivers start toward some cross-country destination, with an expectation of a big paycheck. Then that solo drivers gets a message to meet a team truck somewhere and swap trailers. Solo drivers gets paid mileage for what he drove, but he spends all his time waiting at shippers and driving in city traffic, not getting the long and easy trips with big paychecks.
     
  10. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

    14,489
    30,980
    Sep 18, 2009
    Memphis, TN
    0
    Sometimes lol......I've repowered a few loads and been on the winning end.
     
    truckdriver31 Thanks this.
  11. Moose1958

    Moose1958 Road Train Member

    15,090
    33,172
    Dec 17, 2010
    Williesburg, Virignia
    0
    The lines between a repower and a simple drop&hook have been blurred a bit. Almost all of the larger carriers use drop&hooks at terminals and customers as much as they can. Then they use "local" drivers in day cabs to ferry loads and empty trailers from customers to terminals or drop yards. Most of the time these local drivers are not assigned to the loads, they just ferry them and are paid by the hour. A repower though is a bit different. A repower can and often does happen in a terminal, but most do happen in drop yards and Truck Stops.

    Let's use an imaginary load going from Atlanta to Phoenix. In Atlanta, a local driver will pick up the load and ferry it to the carrier's terminal on the southeast side of I 285 and drop it. This is NOT a repower in the classic use of that word. Now, a driver is assigned that load that lives near Dallas Texas. After picking that load up said driver is notified of a family emergency and asks to be taken off the load. Another driver is headed to Dallas to live unload and will be finished by the time the Phoenix load gets there. In Dallas, they meet up and exchange trailers. Now the first driver can take an empty trailer home and deal with that emergency. THAT is a repower. Then that 2nd driver picks up in Dallas and takes the load to a drop yard in Phoenix and drops it. Then later a Phoenix local driver will go spot the trailer and bring back another loaded trailer to the drop yard. This is NOT a repower in the classic sense.
     
    tscottme Thanks this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.