โOct-16-2018 12:50 PM
โNov-14-2018 06:31 AM
hornet28 wrote:
Lyle, have you checked to see if they there's a brake setup that would bolt on instead of changing axle out?
โNov-14-2018 05:15 AM
โNov-14-2018 04:51 AM
โNov-13-2018 12:17 PM
โNov-13-2018 09:48 AM
hornet28 wrote:obgraham wrote:
Indee, downhill brake usage is matter of brain power, not vehicle power.
On our return to Arizona this week, I was behind a guy in a pretty old Suzuki Sidekick. (Very amall SUV, for those wondering). He evidently rode his brakes the whole descent on AZ87, because smoke was pouring out of both rear wheels. Surprised he was able to stop at all.
Seen that more than once running east on 89A from Prescott to Cottonwood
โNov-12-2018 06:08 AM
obgraham wrote:
Indee, downhill brake usage is matter of brain power, not vehicle power.
On our return to Arizona this week, I was behind a guy in a pretty old Suzuki Sidekick. (Very amall SUV, for those wondering). He evidently rode his brakes the whole descent on AZ87, because smoke was pouring out of both rear wheels. Surprised he was able to stop at all.
โNov-11-2018 06:59 PM
Road Phantom wrote:
Start removing as much weight as possible, especially from the truck, anything not necessary for the trip. Don't fill water tank in between CG. or only leave enough to wash up. Be honest with yourselves when dumping unneeded weight, like clothes, canned goods, etc.
Here's a link to routing your trip. Copy and paste in your browser.
https://www.flattestroute.com/
Surprisingly, buying less of a truck with a smaller engine doesn't save gas. Your truck will work harder and therefore suck up more gas than normal. Your brakes will be compromised, so keep plenty of space between cars (four second rule, maybe six or seven in your case) to make up the added stopping distance. Have your brakes and truck bearings checked often. They can burn out from the added weight they are carrying and not designed for. Another weak link are the truck tires which are not designed to carry the extra weight over and above factory recommendations.
โNov-11-2018 10:02 AM
โNov-09-2018 09:36 AM
โOct-26-2018 10:32 AM
chineselady00 wrote:
Hi, Lyle
Thanks. So we are in the same camp โ not enough truck โ ๐ We struggled before we bought it and asked lots of people at that time. But so far, I think it met our expectation, donโt regret my decision.
โOct-25-2018 01:50 PM
โOct-25-2018 01:45 PM
RickLIght wrote:
https://www.flattestroute.com
Lets you plan and see just how bad it might be. It seems built mostly for bicyclists!
โOct-25-2018 01:41 PM
obgraham wrote:
OP, I think you should change your approach to RV planning. Don't look at the cities and urban areas as a goal for any of your driving, but rather as an obstruction. With an RV you want to be out in the countryside, looking for scenic views, nice roads, and offbeat things to see.
An RV is not designed to visit Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, Denver, and Los Angeles, although you might have to pass through them to get where you are going.
And don't obsess about the mountains. I won't comment on whether your truck is the right one or not, but most all RV's will handle the normal grades across the US and Canada, even if you have to slow down and use up fuel like it was free.
We've done both countries side to side and top to bottom, and never gotten stuck on a mountain grade. (Well, there were one or two where I had to pull over and cool her down a bit!)
โOct-25-2018 11:10 AM
โOct-25-2018 10:39 AM