Forum Discussion

jkwilson's avatar
jkwilson
Explorer III
Mar 11, 2018

Jacking to change a tire or service brakes or bearings?

I know this has been beaten to death, but my situation is a little different than most of the threads I see here. I have towed a lot of different trailers a lot of miles, and have changed tires in gas station parking lots, on lonely gravel roads, in muddy fields and a bunch of other inconvenient and dirty places.

Every single time I’ve jacked up a trailer, I’ve put the jack under the plate on the end of the axle where it mounts to the spring or to the frame of the trailer. As an engineer I can tell you, in spite of what manufacturers may tell you, this is the best place to lift one for a tire change. I carry a hydraulic jack in my truck with plywood pads and never have a problem.

But my 5th wheel is different. I thought I had a workable method, but I’m glad I learned it wasn’t practical at home. The biggest difficulty is the fact that there is no plate under the axle, just the U-bolt.

Link to a photo share from my Amazon account

If I try to lift by the frame, besides the fundamentally bad idea of applying a load at an unstabilized point on an I-beam with a very narrow flange, I have to lift the trailer forever to get the tire off the ground. The jack will need a lot of blocking just to reach the frame, and I’ll end up with a jack sticking way up and the trailer leaning over to compensate for spring movement. Not ideal for frame integrity or stable jacking.

I’ve tried driving it onto a block, but the distance between the axles makes this impractical. I’d need to carry half a lumber yard to get high enough to lift the other wheel.

There has to be a better way.
  • rhagfo's avatar
    rhagfo
    Explorer III
    Sorry but I place the jack directly I n the axle and lift! While many would like you to think these axles are made of tin foil, they are strong enough to support the load the tire is carrying. If they were so thin jacking would dent it, then the first small pothole you hit the tire would be leaning out at 10 degrees!
  • Camping World sells a device called "Trailer Aide". No jacks are needed:) Just drive your RV tire up the tire and the other tire will be lifted off the ground. The just move the trailer aide to the other tire. I carry 2 at all times in my trailer.
  • I use a hard piece of 2x4, I think it's oak, under the u-bolt. I cut out a groove, that just fits the u-bolt, making a flat surface on the axle. Then I put a short bottle jack under, to just raise the tire.

    Jerry