First, get some substantial time driving them. When you repo one of these, you have to be quick - if it's attached to a trailer, you typically have to drop that trailer, and it could be any type of trailer... dry box, RGN, whatever - and again, you need to be quick. None of this OTR, saunter out of the truck singing, "I've got tiiiiiiiiime on my side" nonsense. Then, you get enough experience that a towing and recovery company will hire you. Get a little time doing that, let them assess if you're ready to do repo work. If they decide you are, then you get into it.
Yes. If he has a repo order, it is no longer YOUR truck.
This is based on where the repo is done (what State and Country) What the contract between the towing operator, bailif and lender as well as the law in the Jurisdiction the repo takes place. Then how many miles, where the semi is stored and how long. Also how difficult was the repo? Was the unit surrendered to the lender? or did the lender have to sneak out with tow truck and repo it the hard way? A tractor that is surrendered at the lenders storage facility may only cost $1000 If they had to track down the unit and repo it the hard way $3000 to $5000 is common. And no it isn't $5000 for driving it away. That includes bailiff fees towing skip tracing auction costs etc.
Who invented the Semi-truck?
If the semi truck knocked on the garbage truck, yes.
Fyda Freightliner is both a semi truck and buisness truck manufacturer. You can look them at their website for more information http://www.fydafreightliner.com/new_trucks.aspx
Probably not. He'd probably ask you to get out of the car.
A vehicle with 18 wheels is commonly known as a "semi-truck" or "tractor-trailer."
Semi-articulated
Class B CDL if you're only repossessing the power unit, Class A CDL if you'll be repossessing entire combinations or repossessing them with a wrecker.
The best places to post your truck would be on a business site, for those who are in the construction industry. This will assure you have a good target audience.
Yes
Not sure of a unit called a Transformer, but Pierce Sales in Henrietta, Texas had one called The Recluse that folded out of a normal pickup truck and turned into a repo truck. There was another unit called The Illusion made by a company in Houston, but I believe they went out of business.