Sep-12-2013 09:12 PM
Sep-17-2013 09:59 AM
CA Traveler wrote:1 battery fully charged will operate any electric slide room or hydraulic room.I completely agree with this statement.
But one poster said he had 11V for the slides w/o running the engine. And as I previously posted his system is compromised with small wiring, other design limitations or battery issues. OK but just understand how the mfg has limited cost, what your limitations are and move on...
Sep-17-2013 09:54 AM
Sep-17-2013 09:45 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
To my surprise, when I had our coach in for a slide malfunction, the lead tech at the facility said to level the coach first then deploy/retract the slides. Which is against what Monaco lists in the manual. Apparently, we have one slide that needs adjusting once a year as regular maintenance. I've never read that in the manual (doesn't mean it's not there).
When I had the slide malfunction, the coach was leaning towards the driver's side when I was having it washed at my storage facility. The tech believes that the rather severe leaning to one side caused my slide to not retract correctly. Just as soon as I saw it not working right I released the button which left the slide about 4 inches out.
I made an appt. at the facility and drove it 65 miles for service. The tech said that it was a good idea that I stopped the slide when I noticed it not working correctly. By stopping it, it didn't cause any damage. They were able to adjust it and pull it in.
So, for now, I'm going to follow my tech's advice and level first then put the slides out.
MM.
Sep-17-2013 09:30 AM
dougrainer wrote:Mr.Mark wrote:
To my surprise, when I had our coach in for a slide malfunction, the lead tech at the facility said to level the coach first then deploy/retract the slides. Which is against what Monaco lists in the manual. Apparently, we have one slide that needs adjusting once a year as regular maintenance. I've never read that in the manual (doesn't mean it's not there).
When I had the slide malfunction, the coach was leaning towards the driver's side when I was having it washed at my storage facility. The tech believes that the rather severe leaning to one side caused my slide to not retract correctly. Just as soon as I saw it not working right I released the button which left the slide about 4 inches out.
I made an appt. at the facility and drove it 65 miles for service. The tech said that it was a good idea that I stopped the slide when I noticed it not working correctly. By stopping it, it didn't cause any damage. They were able to adjust it and pull it in.
So, for now, I'm going to follow my tech's advice and level first then put the slides out.
MM.
Despite what ANY manual states, what you posted is just common sense. MOST RV lots and MOST service facilities will have level or near level pads. So, extending the jacks would not be needed to extend and retract the rooms. But any shift in the chassis frame caused by unlevel pad or uneven ground will require the RV to be leveled. Then extend and retract the rooms. I have yet to find any RV that requires yearly adjustment on a slide room. If so, then there is a major problem with the complete mechanism or the cut out in the RV. Which slide on your RV requires that yearly adjustment? Doug
Sep-17-2013 04:33 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
To my surprise, when I had our coach in for a slide malfunction, the lead tech at the facility said to level the coach first then deploy/retract the slides. Which is against what Monaco lists in the manual. Apparently, we have one slide that needs adjusting once a year as regular maintenance. I've never read that in the manual (doesn't mean it's not there).
When I had the slide malfunction, the coach was leaning towards the driver's side when I was having it washed at my storage facility. The tech believes that the rather severe leaning to one side caused my slide to not retract correctly. Just as soon as I saw it not working right I released the button which left the slide about 4 inches out.
I made an appt. at the facility and drove it 65 miles for service. The tech said that it was a good idea that I stopped the slide when I noticed it not working correctly. By stopping it, it didn't cause any damage. They were able to adjust it and pull it in.
So, for now, I'm going to follow my tech's advice and level first then put the slides out.
MM.
Sep-16-2013 09:50 PM
Sep-16-2013 04:50 AM
CA Traveler wrote:1 battery fully charged will operate any electric slide room or hydraulic room.I completely agree with this statement.
But one poster said he had 11V for the slides w/o running the engine. And as I previously posted his system is compromised with small wiring, other design limitations or battery issues. OK but just understand how the mfg has limited cost, what your limitations are and move on...
Sep-15-2013 09:34 PM
1 battery fully charged will operate any electric slide room or hydraulic room.I completely agree with this statement.
Sep-15-2013 08:34 PM
dougrainer wrote:
No, I do NOT own an RV, I am a professional RV tech with 34 years experience working on motorhomes. We sold Alpine until they went under and NO, just having a Hyd slide system does not mean there is a standard procedure for leveling and deploying the slides and jacks. There is no harm done if you level the deploy or you deploy then level on fairly level ground. You do NOT want the chassis twisted and then try to extend the slide rooms. 1 battery fully charged will operate any electric slide room or hydraulic room. Doug
Barb & Dave O'Keeffe - full-timing since 2006
Figment II
(2002 Alpine 36 MDDS) 🙂Sep-15-2013 06:10 PM
BarbaraOK wrote:dougrainer wrote:BarbaraOK wrote:
We also have slides that will not operate with the engine running. Nor will they go out until the jacks are down. So it isn't all or even most who need engines running. Sure sounds like bad design to have any thing to do with the house on chassis batteries. Sounds like manufacturers who skimped on designing number of house batteries to handle the load of all of the house functions.
Barb
Very FEW Motorhomes have the design that the jacks are to be extended before the slides operate. Me thinks you have an HWH system for both Jacks and slides as HWH DID offer that type design. But it was NOT standard for HWH jacks systems and only if you had Hydraulic slide system. The design of "which" battery system has nothing to do with shortcuts or cheapness by the OEM. It is just what the OEM and their Engineers decided to do. Some require the Engine running to make sure you have as MUCH battery power (Alternator) to power the system---usually Electric slide rooms. Some require the Engine OFF as a protection from the slide being able to extend in transit. There is NO set rule and their is no system that is "better" than others. My preference would be for the slides to operate anytime the engine is running. Which would mean BOTH battery banks would be online, so if one set was low the other and the engine Alternator would supply full power. Doug
Doug, are you in a gasser or DP?
Yes, we have an HWH system. Living room slide is very large so it make sense to use hydraulics for it. And since the system requires dumping air, then leveling, then the slide goes out, kind of hard to have the engine running and filling the air bags! While I know that Monaco requires slides out then dump air and leveling, most other DPs that use hydraulics are like ours.
And why is having sufficient batteries (we have 4-6 volt batteries) an anathema for RV Engineers - - except to save money? If our batteries are fully charged when we stop, we can level and extend slides without having to worry about our batteries and still have enough power to do everything we want until the next day when we start the generator to recharge if we are boondocking. And if we have FHUs then why would we need the engine running unless the inverter/converter couldn't recharge the batteries or can't keep up with the drain? If that is so, again it seems like a bad design. I do agree, people next to you wouldn't be happy if you have to start the engine just to bring in the slide in the middle of the night, which we've done before when the winds get real high (60 mph+) and we don't want the slide topper shredded.
Barb
Sep-15-2013 05:39 AM
mena661 wrote:dougrainer wrote:If the engine is running and we want to open the slide, one of us has to press and hold an override switch while pressing the slide switch. It's on the wall next to the bathroom. Ours is a 2009. I'll get you a picture of it when I get a chance. Otherwise, the engine has to be off. It might have been added by the previous owner (we got it used) but it's there.
Where and what does this override switch do. We quit selling Newmar in 2008, and we sold and I service them from 1992 till 2008 and NEVER saw any type override switch on a Newmar. Doug
Sep-14-2013 07:54 PM
dougrainer wrote:BarbaraOK wrote:
We also have slides that will not operate with the engine running. Nor will they go out until the jacks are down. So it isn't all or even most who need engines running. Sure sounds like bad design to have any thing to do with the house on chassis batteries. Sounds like manufacturers who skimped on designing number of house batteries to handle the load of all of the house functions.
Barb
Very FEW Motorhomes have the design that the jacks are to be extended before the slides operate. Me thinks you have an HWH system for both Jacks and slides as HWH DID offer that type design. But it was NOT standard for HWH jacks systems and only if you had Hydraulic slide system. The design of "which" battery system has nothing to do with shortcuts or cheapness by the OEM. It is just what the OEM and their Engineers decided to do. Some require the Engine running to make sure you have as MUCH battery power (Alternator) to power the system---usually Electric slide rooms. Some require the Engine OFF as a protection from the slide being able to extend in transit. There is NO set rule and their is no system that is "better" than others. My preference would be for the slides to operate anytime the engine is running. Which would mean BOTH battery banks would be online, so if one set was low the other and the engine Alternator would supply full power. Doug
Barb & Dave O'Keeffe - full-timing since 2006
Figment II
(2002 Alpine 36 MDDS) 🙂Sep-14-2013 06:14 PM
dougrainer wrote:If the engine is running and we want to open the slide, one of us has to press and hold an override switch while pressing the slide switch. It's on the wall next to the bathroom. Ours is a 2009. I'll get you a picture of it when I get a chance. Otherwise, the engine has to be off. It might have been added by the previous owner (we got it used) but it's there.
Where and what does this override switch do. We quit selling Newmar in 2008, and we sold and I service them from 1992 till 2008 and NEVER saw any type override switch on a Newmar. Doug
Sep-14-2013 03:59 PM
BarbaraOK wrote:
We also have slides that will not operate with the engine running. Nor will they go out until the jacks are down. So it isn't all or even most who need engines running. Sure sounds like bad design to have any thing to do with the house on chassis batteries. Sounds like manufacturers who skimped on designing number of house batteries to handle the load of all of the house functions.
Barb