As truckers, we should take great pride in how our trucks look!  After all, our truck is what many see before we can even step one foot out onto a customer’s lot.  For many of us, it may even serve as a giant billboard as well.  I see a lot of time spent on shining chrome, polishing aluminum, and dressing tires, but painted surface protection should be considered in your truck's beauty routine as well.  
 
Vehicle manufacturers have come a long way in the area of painted surface quality over the past couple decades.  Since the 1980's, when advanced clear coats became the norm from the factory, many things have changed other than a plethora of color choices.  One thing that has not changed though, is the beating that our trucks take being out in the elements every day, all year long!  These trucks see everything imaginable that could harm paint including snow, sleet, ice, dust storms, hail, flying rocks, salt, and even the suns hammering ultraviolet rays!   With the advances in paint jobs and clear coats, many think there is no longer a need for clear coat protection.  This could not be further from reality, as I am sure you have all seen trucks with the roof caps and hoods that have a "lizard skin" look to them with dry patches all over going down the highway.  This is a direct result of the harsh elements and abuse a truck’s paint job takes on a daily basis, culminated with years of not caring for the clear finish in the proper way.
 
Since your clear coat protects your paint, what protects your clear coat?  It is hard to think that something as simple as wax could shine and protect your paint, all in one easy step.  I have witnessed drivers at the truck wash counter opting out of the extra $5 to $10 it takes for a good spray wax and wonder if they have any idea of the long-term effects on their overall resale value.  I happen to know first-hand (being in a family of custom painters) that a good aftermarket rig paint job is far, far more than the extra wax cost over the lifetime of a truck.  To put it into perspective, if you wash your truck every three weeks, you are only going to spend around $170 extra every year.  Over a typical useful life of ten years from your usually owner-operator, that is only $1700, which probably wouldn't even cover repainting your truck’s nose at a decent shop!
 
Protect your clear coat and spend a little extra money on something that will pay off in ways other than just showing your pride, although that is important as well!  Opt in for that spray wax, or even splurge on a hand wax if you can find someone crazy enough to attempt it on a condo sleeper!  A good, clean image can do a lot in our industry and whether it is the way we dress or the clean look of our trucks, making the right choice can have lasting effects on your bottom line.  Make the most out of your single largest asset and consider spending that little extra bit on things that will make it last longer inside and out!  Also, be sure to take care of the paint on the outside to help get the best resale value for it in the end that you possibly can because let’s face it, none of us specifically go truck shopping and say, “Ooh, I really want that oxidized, weather-beaten one!”

Comments (6)

Jimmy Nevarez

Jimmy Nevarez is the Owner/President of Angus Transportation, Inc., based in Chino, California.  Jimmy pulls a 53' dry van hauling general dry freight for his own small fleet, operating on its own authority throughout all of Southern California and Southern Nevada.

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Jimmy you are spot on! Chrome is very nice but it doesn't look good if the pain is bad. My truck shown in my profile had taken some serious abuse from the elements over the years and with previous owners and the paint was looking very bad, in fact it was so bad that washing it didn't make it look any better and seemed like a waste of time and energy. I paid an auto detail shop to detail it from top to bottom. Wet sand the paint and buff and polish it out and then full wax top to bottom, polish all the chrome and acid clean all the aluminum. Two days and $800 dollars later my truck looked brand new. It was expensive but I guarantee I'll do it again.

On a side note, I spent all last week overseas, part of the week in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and part of the week in the United Kingdom. During the week I saw dozens of European trucks and not one was dirty or had a bad paint job. In fact all were very clean, shiny and the drivers seemed to take great pride in their ride. I saw trucks from the UK, The Netherlands, Germany, France, Hungary, Italy and a few other countries. I saw the following brands: Scania, Volvo, Mercedes Benz, DAF and Renault. All are cabovers with small sleepers due to length restrictions, all were single screw tractors with a tag axle and three axle trailers. The tractors and trailers are completely air ride giving them a very smooth ride for the driver and a fair amount of suspension adjustability They are extremely quiet, in fact inside the buildings we were in, you couldn't even hear them run. I was very impressed with the technology, equipment in general and especially the way the operators took pride in and care of their trucks.

July 22, 2014 14:11:57 PM

I agree that a clean truck gets inspected less, along with a much better image for the company. Jimmy's article is spot on about keeping the rig waxed. The Freightliner in my picture was a great example of pay now or pay later. The trucks clear coat was dingy at best. took several hours buffing the paint to get it restored. Another reason not mentioned is better resale value.

July 19, 2014 21:24:44 PM

Very good points! I miss the self serve wash I used to use. No one, not even the best place I go to, washes my truck like I wash my truck!

July 16, 2014 18:31:27 PM

I hate the attitude I see with a lot of company drivers- "not my truck so why should i keep it clean?" I wash and detail my truck every week. Fortunately there's a self serve car wash near where I live that my truck (without trailer) fits in

July 13, 2014 21:19:39 PM

A clean truck reflects on many things. I also believe that a clean truck will get inspected less.

July 13, 2014 7:20:05 AM

Little things go long ways!

July 12, 2014 11:47:21 AM