Tales of A Rusty Track

on May 13, 2013


 
       "The tracks that lined my interior van were getting rusty,” notes Joe L., a private truck owner in New Orleans.

Joe says he’s been in the trucking industry for more than a decade, but he is quite fed up with having to change his trucks ‘diaper’ as he likes to call it.

“I like to keep my truck a clean and shiny ride, and a healthy breathing environment.” Because of his proper upkeep, Joe complains that the rust and other easily damaged loading items he purchases require constant refurbishing or replacing.

His logistic tracks, for one, must be changed as soon as the rust begins crawling its way in. “My son Lucifer is a great helper and loves to be my loading partner, but he’s allergic to the bacteria that grows on these tracks and hooks, and I sometimes have to find a replacement helper so that he can stay home and sneeze!” Joe laughs. “But this is actually no joke!”

“Just the other day”, Joe told us, “I had to let my son off the hook, no pun intended, and let him rest off his allergies, while I did the lugging myself. At one point, I just really needed some help, couldn’t do it m’self, so I called my friend Abe who lives down the block, to lend me the hand that I so desperately needed.”

Joe adds that unfortunately, Abe’s usual capabilities were compromised, when he scraped his seemingly invincible huge arm across the sharp ends of his logistic track. “Abe needed stitches. My truck basically became an ambulance for the day, and I lost some business, and kinda’ lost some trust from my old friend too.”

Left on his own, with a huge truck to load, a friend in the hospital, and a son confined to his house with the sniffles, Joe was at a loss. “I was completely exhausted and just wanted to crawl into my sleeper and catch some shut-eye.”

In his sleeper though, more problems arose.  His handy trailer-hook ratchet straps that were now useless as they did not connect to the Logistic Track that covered the walls, were strewn across the floor haphazardly. Rust and dust and mold and every other microscopic creepy crawler had found a home in his sleeper. “I almost decided to sleep outdoors that night, if I could sleep at all, that is.”

“That’s when I came across Dccargomall. My son had been browsing the internet back at home, and had found a lovely site full of solutions to my saga.”

He was shocked at what he’d been missing all these years. “I could have saved myself a lot of trouble, but it’s never too late…” he adds. 

Joe hungrily selected a  zinc-plated logistic track that was rust resistant, a D ring that would connect his formerly useless strap to his new E-Track, an actual E Track Ratchet strap with spring E fittings for when he just wanted a quick click, and E Track Ratchet strap with spring E fittings that snugly covered the sharp edges of his tracks. 

“I’m excited to have my Lucifer back on the team, and Abe was excited about the new plastic end-fittings. He decided to give me another chance when I guaranteed him a safe experience with his new phobic no-scratch policy.”

Joe keeps coming back to get more. But it isn’t because his old parts need constant replacements. He now browses just for fun, and is enthusiastic about adding any measures he possibly can to ensure safe and secure loading in a host of innovative ways.

“I couldn’t recommend this site enough.  I think of it as the Doctor for my truck. If I want the security that I am guaranteeing to my trusty load helpers and if I want my load secured in the best possible fashion, to ensure no spillage, breakage, or uneven loading caused road accidents, then dccargomall.com is the go-to for me. Thank you.”

You’re very welcome, Joe L.




2 comments:

Unknown said...

My brother was a trucker for years before moving into fleet services, and he found their equipment to be very useful as well! Thanks for sharing

DC Cargo Mall said...

Pleasure!

Post a Comment

Thanks for sharing with us!

shouldn't be volgur.