I told the agency last Thursday that I was available for work all this week, and they said they’d call back as soon as they had anything.
Well, “as soon as they had anything” was 7:20am on Monday morning , after I had assumed that they didn’t want me, so I had stayed up watching the snooker…
Anyway, the job was to deliver PVCu window parts to places around Swansea. Their usual driver hadn’t turned up, so I was called out at the last minute, and since I started late, I missed the last 2 drops (since it was after 5pm by the time I got to Camarthen).
The truck was a DAF curtainsider (I’m not sure of the model, but it had “CF” on the front of the cab, and “65.220” on the side - I’m guessing 6.5-litre, 220 horsepower?
So, things I learned this time…
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Make sure they show you how to operate the tail lift (if fitted) before you leave - it appeared to be isolated, and I never found the switch (and when I phoned the office, they didn’t have a clue where it was either).
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When asking for directions, make sure the person you ask knows what you’re driving. I asked in a post office, and whilst the directions were absolutely correct, it involved me going down a road that was just about as wide as the truck itself, and had a perfect 90-degree bend, with walls/fences on all sides. Whilst trying to abort that, I then got semi-stuck in a similar situation because someone had parked opposite a T-junction.
I eventually got them to move, and escaped. The customer was on a “Trading Estate” whose name I won’t even attempt to spell (typical Welsh with lots of Ws, Ls and Ds), but the "Trading estate was one building housing what looked like one company. It was small enough not to feature on the Streetezee map of the town (there isn’t an A-Z of the place).
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Beware of entering an off-road parking area with a significant ramp - I nearly grounded the truck, as the area in front of the customer’s building was nearly a foot below the road, and there was only a truck-wide concrete ramp down - I attacked it a bit too hastily, trying to get off the road rather than wait and assess it like I should have done. I went in at an angle (about 30 degrees to the road), and as the wheels came off the ramp, the running boards and tailgate hit the ground
I ended up parked between the front of the building and the road, and I needed to be at the side. I then had to reverse, using a number of shunts, up the steep side of the ramp, back onto the road, and then reverse back beside the building like I should have done in the first place.
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Don’t go to Wales, unless you’re Welsh. Asking for directions to “Cwllddllwwggn” Trading Estate is tricky
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Just because someone gives you directions to somewhere, doesn’t mean they are correct. I asked for directions from one customer to the next (since it was another branch of the same company), and he gave me them. They all started from a specific roundabout. I confirmed which roundabout I was starting from twice, but once I got out on the road, after a few wrong turnings trying to follow the directions (turning around a large truck on small-ish roads in the Welsh countryside is rather tricky), I eventually realised (after 5:30pm) that the roundabout he was talking about was actually 4 roundabouts up the road from the one I had confirmed with him…
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Yet again, finding the destination is the most difficult part of the job. Driving is actually easy (IMHO). It’s particularly difficult when doing agency work, so you never go the same place twice…
Boy, I love how large trucks slowly judder to a halt when you turn off the engine… Big boy’s toys
Does anyone have any problems getting into reverse gear? On repeated occasions I just couldn’t get it to engage, and the only way I could get it in was to do a “double-declutch”-style change - go back to neutral, engage the clutch, put the clutch back down, and then move into reverse just before the gearbox stopped running, but this caused a small bit of grinding of the gears. Any tips?