โMay-11-2013 05:28 AM
โMay-14-2013 07:31 AM
Hiking Hunter wrote:
Let me guess - it's to bolt a 2X6 on the bottom!!
โMay-14-2013 06:49 AM
โMay-14-2013 04:43 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
And I add a 2X under mine to get the other tire off the ground with my TrailAir Suspension. Still want to know what the bolts are for on the bottom?
โMay-12-2013 10:05 PM
Hiking Hunter wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
I have the "plus". Mine has 4 bolt heads on the bottom and the bottom looks like saw teeth where the plastic hits the ground.
Does yours look like that?
I think it does have the 4 bolts sticking down. And that's probably what was "skating" on the smooth concrete. I doubt my sawtooth bottom was contacting because the bolts were holding it up. I've repacked mine in the camper now, so I can't inspect it closely, but I don't remember any reason for the bolts. I wonder now if they are removable to allow more contact area for smooth surfaces? I wonder why they are there at all unless it is to provide a better "cleat" in regular ground?
I looked at the Trailer-Aid website. Mine is an older model - the standard Trailer-Aid, not the "Plus" unit. I've had mine about 10 years, probably before the Plus unit was available. According to the description on the website the Trailer-Aid Plus is 1" taller than the older standard unit (and costs $10 more). So, what we have found out is consistent with their models. I have to add more 2-by material under my unit to get the same height as yours.
โMay-12-2013 07:25 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
I have the "plus". Mine has 4 bolt heads on the bottom and the bottom looks like saw teeth where the plastic hits the ground.
Does yours look like that?
โMay-12-2013 11:10 AM
Hiking Hunter wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
That makes a lot more sense!
Yeah, I went back and read my first comment - it was misleading...my bad.
It's a pretty day outside and I had a few minutes, so I hooked up, dug out the old TrailerAid, and confirmed my problem - wouldn't lift the free wheel high enough. So then I added a 2X6 under it and tried again. I had trouble keeping the TrailerAid from slipping on the board, and the board from slipping on a smooth concrete floor, so I pulled the trailer out on a rough concrete driveway. Same problem with the TrailerAid slipping on the 2X6. Using a tapered board and matching the tapers though, I got the wheel to ride up the TrailerAid. The free wheel cleared by about 1/2". I would need two boards to get a good clearance, especially if the ground were soft. So, I screwed two 2X6s together, staggering the ends to provide a "step up". It worked that time on rough concrete providing about an 1 1/2" clearance. I may have to screw the TrailerAid to my 2X6s to keep the slipping down, but this may work - thanx for the idea.
I'm still going to keep my bottle jacks handy, though!
โMay-12-2013 10:44 AM
larry barnhart wrote:
We had a 32 ft alfa fifthwheel and this story came in for changing a tire. I made up a similar product as the trailer aid. In my driveway I tested it and all it did was JAM the tire up into the wheel well and nothing for the tire I would be changing. It did not look like a good thing so I never bought the trailer aid. So when a fella tells me they work I wonder if they really used theirs. Please come back if you have. I like to know everything. It could be that my experience's doesn't always match others
chevman
โMay-12-2013 10:26 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
That makes a lot more sense!
โMay-12-2013 09:14 AM
larry barnhart wrote:
We had a 32 ft alfa fifthwheel and this story came in for changing a tire. I made up a similar product as the trailer aid. In my driveway I tested it and all it did was JAM the tire up into the wheel well and nothing for the tire I would be changing. It did not look like a good thing so I never bought the trailer aid. So when a fella tells me they work I wonder if they really used theirs. Please come back if you have. I like to know everything. It could be that my experience's doesn't always match others
chevman
โMay-12-2013 07:48 AM
โMay-11-2013 10:55 PM
Hiking Hunter wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Are you saying if you go over a curb your tires will touch?
No.
I had the TrailerAid left over from my pull behind TT, and it worked well for those wheels. But the wheels are closer together and the suspension is such on my fifth wheel, that if I pull (or back) onto the TrailerAid, the wheel that should be suspended is not off the ground by about an inch. That would prohibit me from changing a wheel without backing up, out of the "cup" of the TrailerAid to get more height.
I have a form of "Tandem Axle Bogie" suspension so if one wheel goes down the other goes up a bit. Clicky
โMay-11-2013 08:32 PM
โMay-11-2013 06:18 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
Are you saying if you go over a curb your tires will touch?
โMay-11-2013 12:35 PM
Hiking Hunter wrote:
I recently repacked mine for the first time. On the first side, I used a bottle jack under the frame and a jack stand under an axle U-bolt (my axles are "under slung" so I couldn't use the spring perch). That got both wheels off the ground. My manual says to jack under the frame anyway. By the time I got to the second side, I went ahead and purchased another bottle jack - $30 at Harbor Freight for an 8 ton with plenty of extension. So, on the second side, I stayed under the frame and only used the jack stands as a safety under the U-bolts. Both methods seem fine (it was a good excuse to buy another bottle jack).
Some folks use a "TrailerAid" ramp. I have one, but the spacing between my wheels does not lift one wheel completely without contacting the other.
Be sure to replace your inside seals - but be sure they fit right. I have Dexter 6K pound axles and the Dexter part number associated with the seals did not cross properly to an after market seal (several vendors). Had to get a smaller seal to fit snug so it would not leak grease. Recommendation: try (feel) the seal by hand before you seat it in the back of the hub and assume it to be right; or, go by the real Dexter number stamped on the seal and replace it with original Dexter parts (if that is what yours is).