โMay-09-2019 12:22 PM
โMay-19-2019 06:51 AM
โMay-18-2019 11:25 PM
mtofell1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Park on flat ground. Stand back at the side, does it LOOK level???
Yeah.... I'm kind of in favor of this method. I guess the question is what is trying to be achieved by having the TV perfectly level? I understand the 5th to TV and bed rail clearance but I can't see a problem with a TV being a few degrees one way or another off level. Certainly, the trustworthy eyeball test Cummins eludes to should be close enough.
โMay-11-2019 03:12 AM
โMay-10-2019 10:21 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
Park on flat ground. Stand back at the side, does it LOOK level???
โMay-10-2019 03:06 PM
โMay-10-2019 07:09 AM
โMay-09-2019 04:08 PM
โMay-09-2019 03:42 PM
Super_Dave wrote:
Goal would be to evaluate whether pin weight put truck in rear end squat below level from empty, ass high position. I don't think that involves fender well clearances unless I'm not understanding how that pertains to truck being level when loaded.
โMay-09-2019 02:24 PM
โMay-09-2019 01:42 PM
โMay-09-2019 01:10 PM
Lynnmor wrote:Super_Dave wrote:
Is it safe to assume that putting a level on the truck bed rail when loaded would indicate how level the overall truck is riding?
No, that doesn't consider the surface you are parked on. Best to measure and record the empty truck fender opening height at each wheel, then compare that with the loaded measurements. Of course you might want to bring the rear down more than the front.
โMay-09-2019 01:00 PM
Super_Dave wrote:
Is it safe to assume that putting a level on the truck bed rail when loaded would indicate how level the overall truck is riding?