1 / 14

Motor Carriers Ch 3 - Coyle Bardi Novack pp. 95-126

Motor Carriers Ch 3 - Coyle Bardi Novack pp. 95-126. Dr. Mark Maggio. MC Industry Significance. The only door-to-door mode 86% Total freight bill (2002) 28% of the ton-miles share 2 million employees 442 billion revenue miles Characterized by: Generally continually decreasing costs

gloriann
Download Presentation

Motor Carriers Ch 3 - Coyle Bardi Novack pp. 95-126

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Motor CarriersCh 3 - Coyle Bardi Novack pp. 95-126 Dr. Mark Maggio

  2. MC Industry Significance • The only door-to-door mode • 86% Total freight bill (2002) • 28% of the ton-miles share • 2 million employees • 442 billion revenue miles • Characterized by: • Generally continually decreasing costs • Generally continually increasing productivity

  3. Types of CarriersIndustry Structure • For-hire carriers, Private Fleets • Truckload and Less-than-Truckload • Competition, ease of entry and exit • LTL • Link & node networks • Terminal activities, Break-bulk, Trade Unions • Cross-dock activities • Role of congestion and logistics • TL • Line haul • J-I-T implications

  4. Other types of carriers • Small Package Carriers • Heavy LTL • Bulk Haulers • Pneumatic tank (powders, granules, crystals, dust) • Liquid bulk • Gravity flow & dump body fleet • Special Rigging O-S, O-W carriers • Drayage operators • HH goods carriers • Drive away carriers

  5. Types of Commodities • Dry goods and clothing • Food, meats, reefer (cold or frozen) • Building Materials • Lumber, wall board cabinets, steel, bricks • Cement, Concrete, bricks • Manufactured Goods, Motor Vehicles • Rolls steel, rolls paper • Petroleum: Oil, Gasoline, Diesel • Haz Mat, Chemicals • Mining products, Ores, Stone, Sand

  6. Sector Characteristics • Many small carriers in TL • 586,000 carriers • 81% have 6 or fewer trucks • LTL High Fixed Costs-Major Consolidation • Hub and Spoke Systems • 8-12 carriers • Yellow: 20% market share nationally • PUD  line haul PUD p. 99

  7. TL Sector • Effects of Deregulation • Effects of Hours of Service changes • Log book: Record of Duty Status • Effects of competition • Some consolidation • JB Hunt • Schneider National

  8. Operating Divisions of Carriers • Dry Van (box) division • Reefer division • Flat bed • Bulk • Tank division • Step decks and drop decks • Expedited division (go fast) • Most carriers have a Brokerage division • Brokering loads • Brokering trucks • 3d party or 4th party operations

  9. Why do carriers have Logistics Operations? • Cover fixed costs • Including overhead • Profit • Differential rates of ROI • Automated load and truck posting services (DAT) • It’s a non-asset-based business • But some shippers will want you to have asset-based business to decrease risk & improve responsiveness • Allows carrier to go after shippers that need such services • Re-positioning equipment – balancing lanes

  10. Commodities that Truck loses to Rail • Coal • Grain • Petroleum • Chemicals • Automobiles • Paper products • Lumber • Mining products, limestone • I-M Container traffic

  11. Competition among MCs • Vigorous Competition since 1980 • Ease of entry and exit, some sectors with low capital requirements • Operating authority, insurance issues • Competition based on: • Rates • Service – trucking • Service – other • Service – spec equipment acquisition

  12. MC Service Characteristics • Door to door • Can serve any location • Speed of delivery (few or no nodes) • Smaller shipment sizes • Why this is beneficial • Why this this is disadvantageous • Inventory on wheels • Loss and damage relatively low

  13. Equipment Types in MC p. 105 • Power units and Trailers • Straight Truck • Semi-tractor trailer (articulated config) • Doubles • Triples • Dog and Pups • 28’, 45’, 48’, 53’ trailers • Yard dog, Yard Goat • Dolly, Chassis

  14. Special Vehicle Types • Reefers • Open top • Flatbed (stakes) • Side-kit trailer • Curtain-side trailer (rag top) • High cube box • Tanks • Auto rack - automobile • Livestock hauler - Bull rack

More Related