doctor Bob
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- 22 Jun 2011
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Media still on about fuel crisis, I'm SE and everybody at work filled up today no issues. No panic as we all had enough last week.
alarm bells have been ringing, the Road Haulage association has been warning the govt for years.
You can't do anything about weight - a ton of bricks is a ton of bricks - but if you look around a supermarket you realise a lot of volume is just air. Stop shipping air. Sugar Puffs minus the puff. Corn, not cornflakes. Ban pasta that has a hole - spaghetti fine, penne is space inefficient. Suck the gas out of bags of crisps. Trebor mints, no Polos. As for the ambassadors Ferrero Rocher, pass them between heavy rollers and sell them as slabs. Marsh, without the mallow. Gouda good, emmental bad (space wasting holes). Nice cuboid choc ices, no wasteful delicate cornettos. I bet we can save 40% of the lorry trips to supermarkets, and there must be other ways to save space on a whole load of goods.
But it does impact the volume meaning you need might more trucks to ship those sugar puffsYou are aware that because of physics mumbo jumbo (atmospheric pressure), air doesn't have any effect of the weight of a packet of sugar puffs nor on the laen weight of a lorry
Under EU rules, any carrier (and airlines are a good example) could trade between any 2 points - a Norbert Detressangle truck could have come to the UK with French goods, drop them in (say) Leeds, take a UK load from Leeds to Dagenham, then a return load to France. But now we are no longer in the EU I don't think they can do that middle bit - UK to UK
I do have one partial answer. One driver - one truck so it makes sense to have the truck as full as possible. I'm sure schedulers are very good at that, it's the way to make the whole system affordable and profitable. But what does full mean? Capacity is limited by weight and volume.
You can't do anything about weight - a ton of bricks is a ton of bricks - but if you look around a supermarket you realise a lot of volume is just air. Stop shipping air. Sugar Puffs minus the puff. Corn, not cornflakes. Ban pasta that has a hole - spaghetti fine, penne is space inefficient. Suck the gas out of bags of crisps. Trebor mints, no Polos.
But it does impact the volume meaning you need might more trucks to ship those sugar puffs
I have friends who have been living in the UK for over 10 years as a working family. He is an HGV driver, she is a nurse. Both are law abiding.You realise that many EU drivers were no longer welcome to operate in the UK when "freedom of movement" ended?
Hence the issuing of the temporary visas to band-aid the issue.
I thought this was common knowledge, or am i miss understanding your question?
Yes. You are aware that a lorry has a weight limit and a length-height-width limit and can't have more space on the inside than it occupies on the outside?ou are aware that because of physics mumbo jumbo (atmospheric pressure), air doesn't have any effect of the weight of a packet of sugar puffs nor on the laen weight of a lorry
I have friends who have been living in the UK for over 10 years as a working family. He is an HGV driver, she is a nurse. Both are law abiding.
Both were refused visa extensions and had to return home to mainland Europe. The kids were taken out of school and are missing their friends.
So here we are, a well educated, hard working, tax paying family who had made their home in England forced to leave by the UK govt. You reap what you sew.
There's been a shortage of nurses for a long time too.
Wont that just be a tractor with a harvest wagon full of wheat? Mind you, we don't have any farmers either. ah wellExactly my point. I know that mass doesn't change unless you manage to use sugar puffs in a nuclear reaction. But I bet you can get 30 tons of sugar puffs in a lorry load if you compress them.
Exactly,,I've read an article by Iain Duncan-Smith who claims it's Covid that's the culprit. All Europe & USA are short of drivers. Shut downs & furlough sent the HGV drivers home, many ended up finding other jobs or retiring etc.. If drivers already worked over here, surely it would've been relatively easy to get visas?Are you absolutely sure that a global pandemic with complete economic shutdown had nothing to do with it whatsoever? Not even a little bit?
Are you absolutely sure that a global pandemic with complete economic shutdown had nothing to do with it whatsoever? Not even a little bit?
I did some HGV driving in the late 70's &early 80's but with today's traffic conditions No-way would I want to be out there with the '***** brigade' - I haven't bothered to drive since Covid 'took over', my cars's on SORN & there it can stay indeff..The universities took them to study media studies in the 90's and they never came back.
Who wants to be a lorry driver anyway ?
I'm sure this is a large part of the problem.I wonder, and its a genuine wonder, what effect rules on intra-country working have had. Under EU rules, any carrier (and airlines are a good example) could trade between any 2 points - a Norbert Detressangle truck could have come to the UK with French goods, drop them in (say) Leeds, take a UK load from Leeds to Dagenham, then a return load to France. But now we are no longer in the EU I don't think they can do that middle bit - UK to UK - and maybe that affects capacity.
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