I'll trade you coffee money for information. Seriously, I've retired from my previous career. One option I'm considering is getting a class A CDL and giving OTR truck driving a whirl. If I don't like it, my situation is such that I won't have to stay in it.
For $4 each:
1. Using the sleeping berth in hot/cold climes, how is the cabin cooled or heated when you're not rolling? Will most companies let you idle the engine during sleeping? Or is there an aux power source for that, or do have to just suffer through sleeping in heat or cold?
2. Meals. If you want to eat well, do you have to spend the dough for truck stop meals? Is it practical to stop at grocery stores for food and still meet your schedules? Can you eat on the roll - carrots, fruit, sandwiches and other finger food, or is that verbotten?
3. Tire chains. In winter snowy areas, do you have to put them on and take them off a lot, or do most truckers use them at all?
4. Not getting lost. Can you use a GPS? If so are the GPS maps accurate enough to rely on or are you better off with printed maps?
5. Driving the truck home. If you have good, legal and safe off-street parking at home (as I do), will most companies let you take your truck home during home time?
6. Will most companies let you smoke a pipe in the cabin - while driving?
7. Is it practical to jump in and out of it, ie. drive 9 months, quit and goof off for 3 months, then get another job for 9 months, etc, or would that pattern make a person unemployable?
Add anything else you think is worth knowing and you'll get a bonus $4.
Cheers,
Steve