I started contemplating the other morning as I was driving in heavy traffic that was traveling fast about how the Cascadia and I act as a team.  As I maneuvered around and with the traffic I realized all of the work the Cascadia was doing, that I now take for granted.  After leaving the city we get into the hills.   I have my cruise set at three below the posted speed limit and my CC Band Switch set to the lowest setting.  The truck really goes to work to control our speed up and down hills.
 
The day starts with a pre trip around the outside of the Cascadia.  The switch is then turned to the on position and the truck does a self-check to make sure everything internal is ready to roll.  We have a few extras on here such as the lane departure warning system, each component is checked, and we hear the sounds that all is working.  Next on the dash I see what I call the red exclamation point go out and I know the DD13 is ready to come to life.  The engine starts easily and quietly and this can be deceiving to how much power we are sitting behind.  I enjoy how deceiving the sound of this engine idling can be.  I know how much power we have when climbing or when picking up speed to pass another vehicle.
 
We also have besides our lane departure warning system, adaptive cruise, and collision mitigation that we use as an aid in our partnership of getting all of us down the road safety.  As the Cascadia merges with the morning traffic the transmission goes to work skip shifting through the gears quietly, smoothly, and efficiently to get us up to our cruising speed.  Next the lane departure system (LDWS) goes to work to let us know if we are to close to the white lines on the road.  The collision mitigation starts monitoring our following distance and if on cruise the collision mitigation monitors the car in front of us to keep us at a safe following distance.  All of this happens quietly unless we get out of our safe zone.  An alarm then lets us know (If the turn signal is not on) that we are getting near to departing our lane. There are times when in construction areas when we have to keep crossing the white line and the LDWS can be shut off for fifteen minutes with the flip of a switch.
 
All of the above sounds great and as if the truck is doing all of the work... NOT!  We are still in control and we as drivers can see what is happening. We know sometimes that the truck can be a little to sensitive.  So I admit sometimes I think our truck is alive as was the robot Number 5 in the movie "Short Circuit."  Sometimes when the collision avoidance system goes off,  I put my foot on the throttle so that the truck cannot slow down as there is no need to panic.  I imagine the Caffcadia throwing up her hands and saying "LINDA, WE ARE GOING TO HAVE AN ACCIDENT why won’t you listen."  I usually say out loud to the Caffcadia "Calm down I have this" when she realizes yep I had it, we are both ok and she calms back down.
 
There are other times when going down a mountain with steep grades on dry roads I will have my cruise set at three under the recommended speed for trucks.  The truck says to me "Linda, relax I have this".  Most mountains do not go straight down and both the compression brake as well as the DD13/DT12 controls our speed as we go up and down the grade until we safely reach the bottom. I am still in awe of how this truck handles hills and mountain grades, up and down.
 
From my captain’s chair I observe the curved dash in front of me reading the gauges, and making sure everything is operating, as it should.  I look out the windshield and the side windows checking the mirrors to observe that everything to the side and behind me is as is should be.  As I scan the dash, the Caffcadia is still performing her job.  I glance, at the GPS's to ensure we are on the roads we need to be on.  Then I scan the side view camera to make sure nothing is hidden from view on my passenger side.
 
The driver, the Cascadia, and all of our safety equipment is to insure that other motorists, our freight, and us all get to our destination safely.   The feeling of sitting in the drivers seat working as a partner with this truck is a joy and why everyday I enjoy my job as a truck driver. I cannot wait till it is my turn to drive.


Comments (7)

Linda Caffee

Bob and Linda started their driver careers after their children left home for college in 2000. Bob started as a driver for a large motor carrier with Linda as a rider. They decided to enter the Expedite industry as team drivers in 2005 and purchased their first Freightliner. Both, Bob and Linda have had their Class A licenses since the early 80's starting out driving in the oil field and hauling grain as fill in drivers where Bob worked as a diesel mechanic. Linda worked at the local country courthouse in data processing.

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Stephen you and Sandy will do well and if you have any questions please call or email us.

September 27, 2015 16:30:39 PM

Looking forward to learning our new truck......Bob and Henry have been very helpful on giving us pointers on how to optimize the DT12. Thanks Guys!

September 27, 2015 16:21:56 PM

Partnership is a great way to put it. The DT12 is a remarkable piece of technology, but you are still, the eyes, the ears, and ultimate decision maker. Plus, I think that it is great that you imagine that SHE yells back at you.

September 25, 2015 5:50:42 AM

Thank You Frank. When I learned to type in school we had 1/2 semester with a manual type writer and 1/2 electric and it was great. When I went to work in an office we quickly moved from a typewriter that could really do some amazing things to using a PC, a color copier, fax machines, and even a electric stapler... All of this to make streamline our office job so we could do what we needed to do much easier for us and the customer. The Cascadia reminds me of all of technology being added to a drivers arsenal to perform a better and safer job.

September 25, 2015 5:08:30 AM

It is nice that technology gives the driver more time to pay attention to surroundings while the technology in tandem provides warnings and information, providing the driver to make the best decision given the situation. Nice article.

September 24, 2015 18:39:53 PM

Craig the more I learn about this truck the better it performs as I work with it instead of against it.

September 24, 2015 15:23:16 PM

That sounds down right pleasant. It's a far cry from my all mechanical 1990 truck. Some day.......

September 24, 2015 8:07:48 AM