Forum Discussion
- MfanExplorerNever hurts to ask dealer or manufacturer?
- TrackrigExplorer IIIn a new house you'd certainly have the builder back to fix it. I've never thought about it in an RV, but I'd certainly have a word with them about it.
Bill - mtofell1ExplorerNever hurts to ask.... that being said I don't think I've ever been in an RV where the floor doesn't flex and squeak :)
- FrankShoreExplorerWhat does the warranty paperwork that came with your TT say?
- scbwrExplorer IIIf the floor didn't flex before and is now, I'd definitely want to know why. And, it should be fixed while you still have a warranty. Good luck!
- dodge_guyExplorer IIWhen was the last time you greased it? I think it`s every 6 months!
- spoon059Explorer II
mtofell1 wrote:
Never hurts to ask.... that being said I don't think I've ever been in an RV where the floor doesn't flex and squeak :)
My 17 year old Nash didn't flex or squeak. Quality products installed correctly shouldn't squeak. - scbwrExplorer IIWhen we were shopping for a new trailer, I saw a few lightweight trailers that had floors that flexed quite a bit. Unfortunately, people must buy them. They have to make compromises to reduce weight, but the floor shouldn't be one.
- DatacomGuyExplorerThey denied any repairs. I'm going to have to keep an eye on it i guess.
- westendExplorerThe brochures I see say it has a tongue and groove plywood floor on a full frame. If the floor is flexing that would mean the plywood is of insufficient thickness, the frame is built with improper load characteristics, or fasteners have loosened.
One old trick is to push talcum powder between the floor sheet and the floor joist. This allows the plywood to move across the joist with little friction.
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