MyAuto1 Transport
Notes from the dispatch desk
Dispatch desk status: on the board — chasing a two-car enclosed Phoenix → Greenwich for Thursday pickup. Journal updates may lag a day.

Est. journal · currently on Volume IV

A dispatcher's working notebook on moving cars across a continent.

Field notes on carrier vetting, load board arithmetic, condition reports, and the kind of paperwork that decides whether a claim gets paid. Written between pickups, edited between drop-offs. No affiliates, no gurus, no shipping quotes.

Dealer desk runs the east-coast corridor — Greenwich, Teterboro, Larchmont, Scarsdale, down through the Main Line. Booked solid through month-end. Dealer accounts: call before 7am Eastern or the load's already covered.

Open vs. enclosed: stop selling the wrong one

The reflexive answer — "enclosed for anything expensive, open for everything else" — is leaving money on the table and, worse, occasionally putting the wrong car on the wrong deck. I walk through the four variables I actually weigh: vehicle ground clearance, route weather exposure, transit duration, and the shipper's insurance posture. One of them is almost always mispriced.

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The load board is a market, not a menu

If you are quoting off last week's posted rate, you are quoting a ghost. Load board pricing is a lagging indicator of a market that moves on carrier availability, seasonal lane imbalance, and fuel. Here's the back-of-the-envelope I run before I commit a price to a customer, including the two corrections I make for snowbird season and the one I make for auction week.

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The three documents I read before I dispatch a carrier I haven't used

Authority status and insurance certificates are table stakes. What actually tells you whether a carrier is going to pick up on time and deliver without drama is their operating history, their inspection record, and — the one almost nobody checks — the declarations page of their cargo policy. The exclusions are where the real surprises live.

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Loading a non-running car without a winch: what to say no to

A car that "rolls and steers" is not the same as a car that "loads." I've watched too many ten-car haulers try to push-load a seized-brake sedan onto the top deck with three guys and a prayer. If the shipper can't confirm three specific mechanical conditions, the right answer is a flatbed to the yard and a separate pickup. The economics work out, every time.

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