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Truckers do not get paid by weight they haul. The drivers are paid by the miles they drive. However, if a trucker is the owner and operator, he may get paid by the companies he delivers for, meaning he WOULD get paid for weight of freight.
shopping channel hosts get paid about 200-300 dollars
Truckers don't get paid by the hour. Depending on the job, they may get paid by the load or the mile. By the mile is more typical in highway trucking, but ice road truckers probably get paid by the load. Also a factor in IRT is the actual route itself. While one driver on a "less hazardous" route may fetch $50,000 another trucker on a more dangerous route (like the Dalton, currently seen on Season 3 of History Channel's Ice Road Truckers) can net upwards of $120,000 for two to three months of hauling. On the other hand, the death toll on this "road" averages out to almost 1 death per mile of the "road".
Depends on their experience, company, type of freight they haul, and method by which they're paid (mileage, percentage, hourly, salary, etc.).
Depends on if they're paid by the hour. Hourly paid drivers typically run daycabs, and are home nightly. What they're paid depends on a number of things. There isn't a set, across-the-board wage.
probably over 10000
Ls tell usP
Truckers are not paid by the hour. They are either paid by the mile or by the load depending on the company they are working for.
There isn't a set rate. It comes down to experience, the company they work for, the type of commodity being hauled, and the method which they're paid.. they may be paid by mileage, percentage, salary, or hourly, depending on the specifics of their job.
They are reportedly paid $5000 an episode.
depend on different departments
That depends on the company policy.