Five truck trend takeaways from February

Five truck trend takeaways from February

We know it’s not easy to keep up with everything that happens in the world of trucking. So here are the biggest stories from February focused on the latest truck trends, all in one place.

5. Trucking data as currency: What is your data worth?

Consider this: You’re running a multitude of trucks that are generating massive amounts of data across multiple OEM nameplates, perhaps on a common third-party data platform. You have plenty of other data within your dispatching, driver training and office management software that probably isn’t integrated into a telematics platform. So what’s its value? Who would want it, and who already has it?

Editor Jason Morgan dives into the issues.

4. Combatting cold weather electrical issues

Proper preventive maintenance can go a long way toward eliminating battery and other electrical issues. Fleets should be equipped with tools that can diagnose battery and charging system issues, and address fundamental electrical system problems.

Click here to find out more.

3. Brake pad development heading into the copper-reduced era

Next year, brake pads will need to reduce copper to less than 5% by weight, and then less than 0.5% by 2025. There’s no magic button that will make this happen; it takes planning and preparation. As the first deadline looms next year, brake manufacturers need to find a material that dissipates heat as well as or better than copper.

Find out how manufacturers are trying to stay ahead of the curve.

2. Electrifying the right trucking applications

When you think about how much braking (electric regen opportunity) and idling (reduced emissions opportunity) refuse trucks do, it’s easy to see where electrification would improve things. The New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) is about to get the chance to test this firsthand.

Click here to read how DSNY is putting Mack’s LR Electric to work.

1. Executive Interview: Cooper Tire is sticking to the plan for its truck tires

Before 2018, there was no Cooper-branded truck tire, and even with all that the company already knew about tires, starting a heavy-duty truck tire brand at the scale required to gain traction with fleets took a tremendous amount of work, imagination and vision. It could have been easy to be gripped by that paralysis that so often comes when there are too many choices. The easiest way to avoid that is to have a plan. Cooper had one, and it’s starting to pay off.

Read about Cooper’s plan for the commercial truck tire market here.

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Navistar passes 100 EV authorized dealers

Over 30% of all dealer locations will be able to support EV sales and service, across 41 states and seven of 10 Canadian Provinces. 

Navistar announced that it now has more than 100 EV authorized dealer locations. The OEM says it will have more than 30% of its dealer locations ready to support the sale and service of both International and IC Bus EVs, across 41 states and seven of 10 Canadian provinces. 

To be EV authorized, Navistar says dealers must:

ACT Research predicts ‘year of transition’ as trailer orders fall in March

ACT says while softer order activity still meets expectations, net orders remain challenged by weak profitability for for-hire truckers.

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Mercedes-Benz eActros 600 completes winter trials

Tested in the cold of Finland, and the heat of Spain, Mercedes-Benz says the BEV eActros 600 is slated to launch at the end of the year.

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Inside the most secret building at Volvo Trucks

What’s no secret is the importance of trucking safety, and Volvo’s goal to reduce accidents across the globe.

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PrePass comes to four new states, adds 116 sites

With this expansion, the PrePass Safety Alliance says fleets with the PrePass app now have 20 percent more bypass sites nationwide.

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