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 Services 


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Auto Transportation 

Shaeffer Logistics provides a variety of car shipping solutions. Open carrier, Enclosed and Multi vehicle transport, is only a few of our vast services. Call and speak with a logistics agent. They’ll provide the best transport solutions based on your needs. Shaeffer Logistics is ready to guide you through your vehicle shipment.
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 Oversized Goods

Our fleet can handle shipments of every shape and size. Just send us your dimensions and we’ll find the right vehicle.

Trade Show 

Shaeffer Logistics is dedicated to making sure that your materials, booth, and show arrive on time each and every time. Our committed trade show coordinators are ready to carefully arrange and manage every part of your shipment, whether you're going to one show or several across the nation.
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Speedy Transit Time

Unsure which mode to use? We can help you choose between LTL, rail, FTL and everything in between. We do more than take your shipment information and book a truck. We help you identify the best mode for the best value, incorporating your shipping needs and business goals.
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Temperature Controlled

We offer a wide range of drivers with temperature-controlled trailers, so you can ship delicate, temperature-sensitive goods with confidence. 

Stress Free Guarantee 

At Shaeffer Logistics we have people you can rely on. Our global network of experts acts as an extension of your team. 

What Our Clients Say

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 Let Us Ship Your Freight 
Call and speak with one of our experienced team members today! 

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Our News


By Henry Payne | Detroit News December 15, 2020
Self-driving technology is coming to a pickup truck near you. GMC says it will offer its hands-free driver-assistance feature Super Cruise on its Sierra pickup sometime in 2022. While the Sierra will not be the first GMC product to option the award-winning technology — that honor will go to the Hummer EV in 2021 — the Sierra is by far the highest-volume GM product to receive the technology thus far. The Sierra joins a rush of semi-autonomous trucks coming to market over the next two years, including the Ford F-150, Rivian R1T and Tesla Cybertruck. Ford’s Active Drive Assist — a hands-free system similar to Super Cruise — is available for GMorder on the all-new 2021 Ford F-150, which has been the best-selling truck in America. The F-150 is due to arrive on dealer lots in the third quarter of next year. Super Cruise will debut on Sierra’s premium Denali trim, and will function while towing. “We’re putting Super Cruise on a Sierra. [It’s] the world’s first true, hands-free driver-assistance tech available pretty much across the United States,” GMC marketing executive Phil Brook said. So it won’t “just be in the big cities [but] in every state because … Sierra, it’s such a popular vehicle.”“We’re putting Super Cruise on a Sierra. [It’s] the world’s first true, hands-free driver-assistance tech available pretty much across the United States,” GMC marketing executive Phil Brook said. So it won’t “just be in the big cities [but] in every state because … Sierra, it’s such a popular vehicle.” Super Cruise debuted in the low-volume, now-discontinued Cadillac CT6 in 2016 and is slowly being expanded to the full Cadillac lineup. But the entire Cadillac brand typically sells just 150,000 units in a typical year, whereas Sierra alone typically sells 220,000. The low-volume, battery-powered Chevrolet Bolt EUV (an SUV companion to the Bolt EV hatchback) will also get Super Cruise when it goes into production next year. Super Cruise and Tesla’s hands-free Autopilot are the leading semi-autonomous systems on the market. But unlike Autopilot, Super Cruise only works on divided highways, where GM believes it is safest and most practical. Ford will debut a similar system next year on its Ford F-150 and electric Mustang Mach E. GM’s Super Cruise (and Ford’s Active Drive Assist) use a camera and infrared lights to ensure the driver is paying attention to the road. Along with GPS mapping and radar sensors, this allows vehicles to drive hands-free on divided highways across North America. While the Tesla Autopilot system prompts drivers every 30 seconds or so to keep their hands on the wheel, the Super Cruise system allows the driver to relax hands-free. Super Cruise only intervenes with escalating alerts if it detects the driver’s eyes aren’t looking ahead and paying attention to the road. Autopilot debuted on Tesla’s Model S sedan in 2014 and has grown in ambition with over-the-air updates. It pioneered automatic lane-change capability in 2018 and is now capable of stopping for traffic lights and negotiating stop signs and pedestrians. GM has charted a more conservative path by limiting the feature to highways, and will introduce automatic lane-change next year. Its conservative approach earned it the prize for best driver-assistance system this year from Consumer Reports. Available on select, higher-trim Cadillac models beginning next year, the Super Cruise option is about $2,500, but should cost less on the high-profit Sierra. On the F-150 and Mach E, expect Ford’s system to cost about $1,600. The brands will charge monthly subscription costs on top of that. Industry analysts say that the Super Cruise take-rate on the Cadillac CT6 was about 30%. If that number holds on the Sierra, it should put nearly 70,000 vehicles on the road a year beginning in 2022 with hands-free capability.
By Dené Shaeffer November 22, 2020
If you're anything like me you'll be amused by this weird news you can use, so let's talk turkey. According to Butterball 4/5s of Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. And out of those 4 at least one family completly demolishes Americas favorite main event THE TURKEY! I guess turkey isn't the easiest thing to make but hey everyone isn't a chef. If you are still worried about a Thanksgiving Day fowl fail, why not insure your turkey with Progressive? YES INSURE! Whole Foods Market and Progressive Insurance have a new way to insure your Thanksgiving meal against those dreaded holiday accidents. To qualify for "coverage," purchase a Whole Foods Market brand turkey today. Yes I know you're wondering why did I decided to write this blog on the last day. I actually just randomly came cross the article.But if you burn, undercook, overcook or commit another turkey fail between Thanksgiving and Black Friday, visit www.turkeyprotectionplan.com to submit a claim. Now the more and more that I think about it this may not be too bad of a idea. Millions of Americans are expected to have scaled-down celebrations amid the coronavirus pandemic, heeding official warnings against travel and large indoor gatherings. The first 1,000 eligible claims get a $35 Whole Foods gift card! "As we anticipate more smaller Thanksgiving gatherings and first-time cooks tackling turkey preparation this year, the Thanksgiving Turkey Protection Plan allows customers the freedom of culinary exploration, knowing all is not lost should their cooking go astray," Theo Weening, Whole Foods vice president of meat and poultry, said in a news release. I mean hey, turkeys are pretty expensive now a days might as well get your money worth. 🤗 https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/food/2020/11/10/thanksgiving-turkey-whole-foods-progressive-insurance-protection-plan/6239911002/
By Dene Shaeffer September 30, 2020
The nationwide average price of diesel fuel fell by 1 cent, the fourth consecutive weekly decline, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s report released Sept. 28. Meanwhile, in a truly unusual report, the national average price of a gallon of gasoline increased by one-tenth of a cent to $2.169, despite the price falling in nine of 10 regions. The one region that saw an increase, the Midwest at 2.5 cents a gallon, was enough to swing the overall national price into upward territory. A gallon of trucking’s main fuel stands at $2.394 a gallon. Diesel costs 67.2 cents a gallon less than it did a year ago. Every region across the country saw prices drop. California experienced the most significant fall, 2.1 cents to $2.541. The state still has the most expensive diesel at $3.236 a gallon. The Gulf Coast had the smallest drop, 0.3 cent, settling at a nation-low $2.154 a gallon. Three regions saw decreases of 1.3 cents; the East Coast stands at $2.473 a gallon, the Midwest at $2.269 and the West Coast at $2.928 a gallon. The Rocky Mountains saw a 1.2 cent-decline to $2.336 a gallon.
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