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โApr-30-2013 06:51 PM
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โApr-30-2013 05:53 PM
wildmanbaker wrote:
Lee, even though its not a Ford, the same fixes should apply. The first 6 month we owned our MH, the DW was scared to death I was going to run off the road on the right side. I suggested that she look in the passenger side mirror and she could see the shoulder line was still outside of the edge of the MH.
โApr-30-2013 05:28 PM
deandec wrote:Oversteer, over correction is caused by the lack of response to steering input. This can be corrected with trac bars. The W22 desperately needs trac bars (which is different from torsion bars, which it already has). Any time you move the wheel, the springs flex sideways. This gives a delayed response to steering input. That delay, causes you to turn even harder. When the coach finally catches up to how far you have turned the wheel, you have turned it too far, and now need to turn it back. You will constantly wonder down the road, always correcting. While you can change your driving habits and slightly improve the situation, the real fix is trac bars. Spend the money and correct the root cause. You also should know that year of coach may have had a recall on shocks, as the OEM were considered too soft. I know the recall covers '04 W22 chassis, so that may end up being your chassis too. Just so you know, model year and chassis year may be significantly different. See if you can find out what brand of shocks are on it.
New MH drivers may tend to oversteer during their first trips. Some folks oversteer in their automobile.
This can cause your discomfort without any mechanical causes.
โApr-30-2013 04:00 PM
GrandmaLee wrote:
Not Ford chassis---it's Chevy.
โApr-30-2013 03:08 PM
โApr-30-2013 02:33 PM
GrandmaLee wrote:wildmanbaker wrote:
I will make a wild guess and say that it has a Ford chassis. What you are feeling is side to side roll, or waller. Early Ford F53 chassis have very soft spring rates that allow side to side roll. It may not have a rear Pan Hard bar/Track Bar either, which allows the rear axle to oscillate under the chassis in a circle. If it does have a Ford chassis, the first thing to do is check if it has a rear track bar. If not, installing one will make a big difference. Moving the sway bar links to the inner hole will give greater resistance to roll also, and does not cost anything. After these mods, adding either aux. air bags, or Timbrens to increase the spring rates. When we first got ours, I though it would turn over in slow turns, as it would lean over until it hit the bump-stops.
Not Ford chassis---it's Chevy.
โApr-30-2013 02:23 PM