Here's a tale that, if it were from any other industry, might inspire a feel-good feature film. It's about a struggling rookie lease-operator who, as he is driving back to the terminal to hand back the keys, decides to try something different.
Carlos Cruz has been trucking all of three years, yet he's wiser than his time in the trenches might suggest. He's a lease operator working for a nationwide refrigerated truckload carrier. He was six months into a truck-lease program with the carrier and he had concluded what many of his colleagues had warned him about; he couldn't make any money on a lease deal.
"After all the payments had been taken out and the expenses paid, I was left with about $300 a week," he says. "That wasn't enough after all the work I was doing."
It was a hard decision to make, but he had decided to give the truck back and walk away before he got in too deep. He told me that a many drivers had warned about such programs, and all the while, he watched and talked to other owner-operators going up and down the road, seemingly doing pretty well for themselves. He wondered, if those other guys are making money, why wasn't I?
Cruz wasn't just sitting there hanging on to the steering wheel. He says he listened to many of the trucker shows on SiriusXM radio so he can learn more about the industry, paying particular attention to Kevin Rutherford's program about how to truck more profitably. He admits, however, that he wasn't putting everything he heard into practice. Sure, he tried progressive shifting. He checked his tire pressure fairly regularly, but his measly $300 take home pay just wasn't cutting it.
So, on what was to be his last trip, a return load right to the terminal, he decided to try, really try, everything he was hearing about on the radio. He'd run that trip many times before so he had some benchmarks, and low and behold, when he fueled up in the yard, he'd burned considerably less fuel than on previous trips. In fact, he'd gained a mile per gallon, which is an astronomical improvement in fuel economy terms.
Buoyed by his accomplishment, he decided to give it another 60 days.
Today, he worries about his engine's torque curves, whether he's running too much pressure in his tires, and whether using cruise control or good old fashioned right-foot throttle management is the best way to save fuel.
"I'm a changed man," he told me over the phone. "I know I can make money here now, maybe not a lot of money, but certainly enough to get by comfortably. These lease deals don't pay that great, but if you manage it right, there's more than enough left over at the end of the week."
6.21 mpg to 7.85 mpg in 30 Days
That's right, at least as Cruz tells it. His fuel mileage went from the low 6s to the high 7s in just one month. A 1.6 mpg improvement that more than quadrupled his net revenue. Cue the big orchestral arrangement and the majestic scenery.













