โDec-16-2018 07:40 AM
โDec-18-2018 10:15 AM
โDec-18-2018 04:17 AM
profdant139 wrote:
My trailerโs spare tire mount is on the back wall of the trailer. I was thinking about mounting a small one-gallon gas can (for my generator) on top of the spare. (That project will be described in a separate post, coming soon.) But before I began the gas can project, I took a good hard look at the spare tire mount.
I removed the spare and realized that all four of the bolts holding the mount onto the back wall were a little loose โ yikes! Worse yet, when I tried to tighten them, they did not tighten.
It turns out that the tee nuts inside the back wall of the trailer were rotating as I tried to tighten the bolts โ the little prongs anchoring the tee nuts had bent.
Clearly, the tee nuts were not adequate for the load of the spare tire, especially given the vibration and shock caused by the spare tire on rough roads. This is what the tee nuts looked like โ tiny and inadequate:
So instead of the original quarter inch steel bolts, I put in 3/8 inch stainless steel bolts. Instead of tee nuts, I added a thick piece of steel bar and used heavy duty lock washers and nuts:
Now the load will be distributed over a wider area of the back wall, reducing the โforce per square inchโ caused by the weight and vibration of the spare tire. And you can bet that I will check these bolts and nuts every so often, just to make darn sure that everything is secure.
โDec-17-2018 04:20 PM
โDec-17-2018 03:37 PM
mobeewan wrote:
Great way for water to get into the wall.
โDec-17-2018 03:05 PM
โDec-16-2018 04:27 PM
โDec-16-2018 12:33 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:
We each do it our own way, but I removed my spare tire from my previous travel trailer bumper mounts and carried them in the back of the pick-up truck bed and kept the weight off the bumper.
โDec-16-2018 12:22 PM
โDec-16-2018 12:20 PM
โDec-16-2018 10:27 AM
โDec-16-2018 09:49 AM
โDec-16-2018 09:31 AM
โDec-16-2018 08:51 AM