SoundGuy wrote:
Thanks for your report, I'll have to get an Andersen Rapid Jack for my own 192RBS. :)
I tested it yesterday on a concrete pad site when we were breaking camp from a long weekend trip. On fully inflated (50 psi - cold) tires, I placed the jack in front of the street side tandem wheel - just as if I were chocking the tire. With my wife carefully watching - and I think having someone watching is key -I just pulled forward slowly until she said "Stop." The result was that the rear tire was lifted perhaps 1 1/2" above the pavement. I didn't measure, but it was certainly sufficient to raise a fully inflated tire in order to remove it.
You know how our 192 RBS easily absorbs things like speed bumps, etc.? It just sort of glides over them (for non-owners). Well, this favorable attribute is why, admittedly after only one effort, that you really need someone observing when you need to stop on top of the Rapid Jack at the appropriate point. I really could not tell from inside our Ridgeline when I needed to stop. I could foresee that I might easily continue rolling forward with the Andersen then it flipping upward and getting caught in between the axles. I didn't take time to analyze the geometry, so maybe I'm just dead wrong. It was only eyeball analysis. But we had a 4+ hour trip to get home before us, and 18-20 mph headwinds, to boot, so we were in a hurry to hit the road.
My question about jacks for our rig was to have a "best practice" approach to raising the trailer. Certainly blocking a bottle jack is an obvious solution, but I kind of like to reduce the number of variables when lifting significant weight off the ground. So after my one test, I'd say sure, it works for our 192 RBS rigs. Let me know if you have other observations.