Oshkosh, WI.
Oshkosh anchors the southern half of the Fox Cities corridor along Lake Winnebago, where US-41 carries the Milwaukee-to-UP-of-Michigan freight backbone four lanes the entire way. Oshkosh Corporation's defense vehicle plant — JLTV, M-ATV, and HEMTT production — moves multi-axle heavy freight in and out daily, while Mercury Marine's Fond du Lac engine works push outboard freight north through the corridor. EAA AirVenture in late July triples local fleet traffic for two weeks, and the Lake Winnebago snowbelt drops lake-effect bands on US-41 from December through February.
Every roadside service we run in Oshkosh
Featured Oshkosh Service Providers
Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Winnebago Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 9
- 16 years in business
- Insurance verified
Lake Winnebago Tire & Fleet
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
Wiouwash Iron Mobile Welding
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 5
- 14 years in business
- Insurance verified
Oshkosh WI Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

US Route 41
6 exits in Oshkosh
The Fox Cities four-lane backbone — Milwaukee to Green Bay to the UP of Michigan. Heaviest truck-volume stretch in central Wisconsin; common breakdown clusters at the Algoma Boulevard and 9th Avenue exits during shift change.

US Route 45
3 exits in Oshkosh
North-south corridor connecting Oshkosh to Antigo and Eagle River. Carries lumber and construction freight; the New London-area frost-heave damage cracks suspension components every spring thaw.

Wisconsin Highway 26
2 exits in Oshkosh
South arterial from Oshkosh to Janesville and the Beloit ag belt. Heavy bulk-milk and grain hauler traffic; the Rosendale and Waupun stretches are common service-call points for through-traffic breakdowns.

Wisconsin Highway 21
2 exits in Oshkosh
East-west alternate from Oshkosh to Wautoma, Necedah, and the I-94 connection at Tomah. Important detour route during US-41 closures or AirVenture-week traffic surges.

Wisconsin Highway 44
3 exits in Oshkosh
Local arterial connecting Oshkosh's south side to Pickett and the rural Winnebago County dairy belt. Lower-speed two-lane sections punish loaded trailer suspensions on the spring-thaw frost heaves.

Wisconsin Highway 76
2 exits in Oshkosh
North-south from Oshkosh through Greenville to the US-45 connection. Carries flatbed and ag-equipment freight; remote stretches mean a roadside breakdown can sit a long time without a passing service truck unless dispatch is local.
Oshkosh WI Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Oshkosh anchors the southern half of the Fox Cities corridor along Lake Winnebago, where US-41 carries the Milwaukee-to-UP-of-Michigan freight backbone four lanes the entire way. Oshkosh Corporation's defense vehicle plant — JLTV, M-ATV, and HEMTT production — moves multi-axle heavy freight in and out daily, while Mercury Marine's Fond du Lac engine works push outboard freight north through the corridor. EAA AirVenture in late July triples local fleet traffic for two weeks, and the Lake Winnebago snowbelt drops lake-effect bands on US-41 from December through February.
Oshkosh is a city in Winnebago County, Wisconsin, United States, and its county seat. It is located on the western shore of Lake Winnebago, adjacent to the much less populous Town of Oshkosh in the north. The population was 66,816 at the 2020 census, making it the ninth-most populous city in Wisconsin. The Oshkosh metropolitan statistical area, consisting solely of Winnebago County, had 171,730 residents. Oshkosh is included in the greater Fox Cities region of Wisconsin.
Oshkosh's freight economy revolves around three giants: Oshkosh Corporation's defense-vehicle plant, Mercury Marine's Fond du Lac engine works, and Kimberly-Clark's paper-mill complex up the corridor in Neenah. The combined effect is a continuous stream of multi-axle heavy haulers, oversized-load permits, and high-value reefer flow up and down US-41. When a Class 8 stalls in the right lane of the US-41 4-lane between Oshkosh and Neenah at peak shift change, the cascade behind it fills the corridor inside ten minutes — and that's exactly when Road Rescue Network's pre-staged service trucks at the Pilot in Sherwood and the Love's in Fond du Lac earn their dispatch fee.
Wisconsin's lake-effect snowbelt off Lake Winnebago is real and it ruins schedules. Most winters drop one or two surprise bands a week between Thanksgiving and St. Patrick's Day, and the US-41 stretch between Pickett and Neenah is a known battery-failure cluster when the temperature swings from 28°F at noon to 4°F at midnight. Our Oshkosh-area service trucks carry methanol-injection kits, jump-pack rigs, and 20-mile snow-tire chains for the rare cases when WisDOT closes the four-lane and the only way out of the corridor is via WI-26 or WI-44.
Whether you're a fleet manager in Milwaukee dispatching a Mercury Marine outboard load north toward the UP, an owner-operator pulling a Kimberly-Clark paper trailer south on US-41, or an EAA volunteer running a fuel truck at the Wittman Regional Airport during AirVenture week, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor reaches you on a single phone call. Dispatch, ETA, photo updates, and consolidated invoicing run through RRN's 24/7 ops desk.