NZ Trucking Magazine, August 2023

Page 122

THE LAST MILE

Don’t put off your

MAINTENANCE I

t was disturbing to read that the cause of the January breakdown of the Cook Strait ferry Kaitaki was the failure of a rubber flexible coupling in the cooling system. No doubt, this triggered an automatic shutdown of all four engines, resulting in the ship drifting perilously close to shore. The part was allegedly made in 2005 but not installed until 2018. The interim report says that Interislander had not followed the coupling manufacturer’s advice for replacement. It also says that since the incident, Interislander had replaced “all dodgy parts” on the Kaitaki but doesn’t say what these were. I wonder if this incident is a result of simply not carrying out planned maintenance. I appreciate that when a unit is heading towards its last days, as the Kaitaki and its sister are, there is often a tendency to push out maintenance – don’t spend any money on it until it breaks, then only do the minimum necessary to get it going again. Planned maintenance works with trucks as well. If the vehicle manufacturer says the lifespan of a component is five years, they mean it. And of course, we had the breakdown of the MV Shiling in

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122  New Zealand Trucking August 2023

Wellington Harbour; after repairs, it broke down again within 24 hours of sailing. At 18 years old, she is most likely on her last legs, and I wonder if the owner had deferred her maintenance pending retirement. Recently, the Energy Efficiency Conservation Authority (EECA) released a tender for a market study into road freight in New Zealand. Its purpose will be to enable greater and quicker decarbonisation in a critical sector for New Zealand. This puzzles me. I would have thought the government agency, in this case, the Ministry of Transport, which advises the Minister of Transport on such matters, would have this information readily on hand. If not, what are they telling the minister? The outcomes of this study will be shared between other government agencies and private entities to allow our freight system to run as efficiently as possible, so they say in the tender. I would have thought it would be obvious that one of the barriers to on-road freight efficiency is the state of our roading network, so why not fix that first? Let’s hope whoever gets the contract and writes the report will produce something that means something to us all and not just tell us what we already know. Let’s also hope that the report is not just a subliminal marketing tool for companies that peddle electronic gizmos that supposedly make business more efficient. Certainly, we don’t want to see another stick-a-wet-finger-outthe-window-to-see-which-way-the-wind-blows type exercise. After all, we, the taxpayers, will be paying for it. On freight volume, it was interesting to read a story attributed to the CEO of NZ Post in which he says that online shopping was down 22% on the same (first) quarter of 2022. He notes fewer parcels are going through their processing centres, and the back of their courier vans are not quite as full as they were. Perhaps this is yet another sign that consumers are becoming more discerning about how they spend their dollars. Eventually, this trend will find its way across many sectors of our industry, I suspect. The Budget came and went, and we saw how the government intends to spend our money. Many commentators say it was a nothing event, but I don’t agree. As anybody who has ever organised a lolly scramble knows, you don’t throw all your lollies out with the first throw; you wait and spread the ‘joy’ along the way, creating the expectation that more will come. It is election year after all. An unattributed quotation I read somewhere recently: “Being a politician is great job. You get to spend lots of other people’s money, and then you can turn your back on them.” The Accidental Trucker


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Articles inside

Don’t put off your MAINTENANCE

2min
pages 122-123

LIVELY POLITICAL DISCUSSION HIGHLIGHTS ANNUAL CONFERENCE

3min
pages 120-121

Taking the pressure off the stresses of LIFE ON THE ROAD

3min
pages 118-120

What does ‘good’ look like for a TRANSPORT OPERATOR?

3min
pages 116-117

The rising cost of INSURANCE IN BUSINESS

2min
pages 114-116

The difference between BARRISTERS and SOLICITORS

2min
page 112

Servicing Cardan shaft park brakes

0
page 111

TAKING A BREAK

1min
page 110

Time to think about TIME MANAGEMENT

3min
pages 108-109

WHAT GIVES?

2min
pages 106-107

Education Engagement Programme

0
page 105

NZ TRANSPORT RECRUITMENT Getting the job done

1min
page 104

Ensuring road safety with BRAKE TESTING

1min
page 102

A Changing World Conference 2023

10min
pages 98-101

EVERY OPPORTUNITY

4min
pages 96-97

ROAD USER CHARGES

1min
pages 94-95

THE SALES NUMBERS

1min
pages 92-94

BUILD-AMODEL TRUCK COMPETITION

3min
pages 84-89

DOBBSY REVISITS CHURCHILL’S HEAD

2min
pages 82-83

RENO CALLING

2min
pages 78-81

LIFE LEFT IN DIESEL

5min
pages 74-77

JOINS THE ACTION MANUFACTURING FAMILY

1min
page 73

OUTBACK AND LOVING IT

6min
pages 70-72

SOARING LIKE AN EAGLE

1min
page 69

THE PENTHOUSE

1min
page 68

New Bodies & Trailers

2min
pages 66-67

FARM TRUCKING IN STYLE

6min
pages 54-57

Three Routes to Success

2min
pages 49-52

FORMAL RECOGNITION OF SKILLS IMPORTANT FOR TRANSPORT SECTOR

1min
page 48

PEDESTRIAN PROTECTION

0
pages 45-47

TRUCKING SECTOR PULLS THROUGH FOR BIRTHDAY BOY OLLIE

1min
pages 44-45

A DAY TO ENJOY K

3min
pages 40-43

WHEN IT’S ANYTHING BUT NORMAL

6min
pages 34-38

A Kiwi OEM

3min
pages 31-32

BUILDING AN RH

3min
pages 30-31

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON

5min
pages 28-30

BACK TO THE FUTURE

12min
pages 20-28

Iveco Group takes full control of Nikola Iveco Europe

0
page 18

New simulation truck driving course to help stem driver shortage

1min
page 16

Registrations for KW100 live

0
page 15

Transporting New Zealand unveils diversity toolbox

1min
page 14

NRC teams up with Little Trucker Down Under

1min
pages 12-13

Scania NZ expands sales team

1min
page 11

Transporting New Zealand celebrates industry at awards night

2min
page 10

Pūhoi to Warkworth motorway finally opens

2min
page 9

CONSTRUCTION CREW.

3min
pages 7-8

BUILD NOW, PAY LATER

3min
page 6
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