I won´t be applying for THIS one....

I won´t be applying for THIS one....

Author
Discussion

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Thursday 14th June 2018
quotequote all
....for 5 points and a bacon sammitch, anyone tell me why?

"The role will include driving and operating a Class 2 vehicle (volumetric concrete mixer) to deliver on site mixed concrete to our clients. Workloads vary from 2 - 6 deliveries per day as part of a two man team, including driving to customer sites (domestic and commercial), operating the mixer, and (where necessary) barrow the concrete with the client."

I´ve never seen them say that before. FFS where will it end, lay the effin stuff as well?

What´s that? Float finish, yessir!

Mandat

3,886 posts

238 months

Friday 15th June 2018
quotequote all
StevieSpain said:
....for 5 points and a bacon sammitch, anyone tell me why?

"The role will include driving and operating a Class 2 vehicle (volumetric concrete mixer) to deliver on site mixed concrete to our clients. Workloads vary from 2 - 6 deliveries per day as part of a two man team, including driving to customer sites (domestic and commercial), operating the mixer, and (where necessary) barrow the concrete with the client."

I´ve never seen them say that before. FFS where will it end, lay the effin stuff as well?

What´s that? Float finish, yessir!
What's wrong with that?

If it's part of the service that the company offers to customers, and it's part of the job description, then there's nothing inherently wrong with this.

If the company offered a float finish as well, then it would be reasonable for the job description to include this as well.

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Friday 15th June 2018
quotequote all
Hi mandat, nice to meet you smile And I´ll assume, because of the lack of smilies, that you are serious.


Nope, sorry, this is not a normal thing.

When I was working as a rigger for GEC they tried to bring in a scheme where, if a mechie fitter was waiting for a rigger to do a job, he could do a little "light rigging" himself.

To put it mildy there was effin hell on.

Fitter were up in arms because they were now being expected to do someone elses job as well as their own.

Riggers were up in arms because, if it went forward, then less riggers would be needed.

Elfan safety ...well, don´t get me started, they threatened to close the site down (Nuclear power station)

I mean, if the Nuclear Engineer dudes were busy could I do a "A little light nuclear engineering"? (I know, I know)



If I started humping barrowloads of concrete around for the client that means he can save money on a labourer, at MY expense.
What if he has NO labourers and you´re expected to do the full 6 metres?
Let me put it this way, one cubic metre weighs about 2 1/4 tonnes. Times 6?

Plus, do you know how many barrowloads are in a 6 metre drum?
Approx 150-180.

No, that´s a piss take, pure and simple.

Just got this reply after an enquiry to a national supplier or ready mix concrete...


Good morning,

No, we do not expect the driver to barrow concrete for customers at all. This is not his requirement and for health and safety we do not advise it. He is expected to drive and unload the product, that is all. It would be down to the customer to barrow.

Kind Regards,

Edited by StevieSpain on Friday 15th June 10:25

Frank7

6,619 posts

87 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
I drove for Ready-Mix, in Townmead Rd. Fulham for about six months, when I was doing The Knowledge.
No one ever asked me to barrow any concrete anywhere, I’d pump it into holes in the ground, or into a hopper, into a container which was lifted up and over the building, or onto plastic sheeting.
Had anyone asked me to pour some in a barrow, and push it on to the site, I would have politely declined, pointing out that my job was getting it to the site, then operating the lever which pumped it from the drum, to wherever they wanted it, then finally, washing the drum out with clean water.

caelite

4,274 posts

112 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
Asda just updated their driver policy recently for their home shopping guys. Whilst previously the drop off was at the drivers discretion it is now Asda policy that drivers offer to take shopping to the customers kitchen and help unpack it. Flats and whatnot included. The only exception being where the driver feels he is 'unsafe'.

All for the same wage was the folks sitting at a till and stacking shelves.

This reminded me a lot of that, just typical of what is expected of drivers nowadays.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
Does it being a 2 man team indicate that the service offered is above standard?

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
If you´re talking about the concrete...no, just the driver, and looked like normal delivery.
I wish I could remember what job advert it was but I just fked it off at the the time.

I spent years driving a 6m truck for Trumix/Tilcon in the North West, so I´ve had a bit of experience.

It really stood out to me, that sentence. I thought "WHaaaat"??

Thin end of the wedge.

edit: Just thought I´s point out, this is a volumetric truck. So you´d have to prepare the mix onsite, then barrow it in? Talk about customer service biggrin

Edited by StevieSpain on Saturday 16th June 10:56

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
mad
biggrin: biggrinbiggrin

Mandat

3,886 posts

238 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all


whistle

Countdown

39,864 posts

196 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
Fred Kite said:
One word, two syllables....DEMARCATION


biggrin

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Saturday 16th June 2018
quotequote all
Mandat said:


whistle
That´s a volumetric thingy, mixes concrete on-site. It´s got barrows on so you can sweep and tidy up your immediate area biggrinbiggrin

Someone will hump concrete in a barrow, I suppose. And there will always be someone willing to do it for less money, too.

Yeah, demarcation is something we need more of biggrin Mind you, since the unions got their asses kicked we´re on a sticky wicket with that st now.

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Monday 18th June 2018
quotequote all
bks!
I had made a lovely post, quotes, replies, everything. Then me PC crashed eeklost it all.
So, here´s the bare bones version biggrin

Frankie, you absolutelynaileditrightonthehead!
THAT´S how the job is done biggrin

Caelite. Yes, I know what you mean.
I´ve only been looking at Class 2 jobs for mebbe 3 weeks but that seems to be way things are going. Load your truck, check the load, drive to a big block of flats, find out the lift isn´t working, hump the bag/trolley/tray upstairs. I mean, wtf?

On the plus side, I have found a job, in Spain, exactly where I want to be and what I want to do. Mixer driver. I know the job inside out so no learning curve. I speaka da lingo. and I know the area well.

On the minus side, , I can´t apply for it until I get my Freeeeekin licence back, medical, CPC. = 4 weeks.
I am properly champing at the bit!


Willy Nilly

12,511 posts

167 months

Tuesday 10th July 2018
quotequote all
Mandat said:


whistle
Registered as "Plant", red diesel, no tacho and 55 tonne gross?

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Wednesday 11th July 2018
quotequote all
Yep, and you don´t need a Cat C to drive it either.
Not yet, anyway.
Mebbe in September they´ll be re-classified as LGV but not yet.
https://www.smmt.co.uk/2018/04/volumetric-mixers-t...

GC8

19,910 posts

190 months

Friday 24th August 2018
quotequote all
Running with barrows? "Youre having a laugh Son!"

I will be sat here making a brew: if you want to the body up a little more then give me a shout.

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Tuesday 28th August 2018
quotequote all
biggrin
laugh

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 28th August 2018
quotequote all
StevieSpain said:
Yep, and you don´t need a Cat C to drive it either.
Not yet, anyway.
Mebbe in September they´ll be re-classified as LGV but not yet.
https://www.smmt.co.uk/2018/04/volumetric-mixers-t...
With a 10 year derogation rolleyes great

StevieSpain said:
I spent years driving a 6m truck for Trumix/Tilcon in the North West, so I´ve had a bit of experience.
I did about a dozen years with a proper firm in the NW until they merged with Tilst. biggrin

StevieSpain

Original Poster:

71 posts

70 months

Wednesday 29th August 2018
quotequote all
speedyguy said:
I did about a dozen years with a proper firm in the NW until they merged with Tilst. biggrin
Trumix?
Or Readymix?

They´re the only ones I can think of.

myvision

1,945 posts

136 months

Wednesday 29th August 2018
quotequote all
StevieSpain said:
Trumix?
Or Readymix?

They´re the only ones I can think of.
Tilcon?

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 29th August 2018
quotequote all
myvision said:
Tilcon?
That's the one.