โMay-22-2016 09:00 PM
โJun-25-2016 08:43 PM
j-d wrote:
Tell you what really helps: Heavy Duty Front and Rear Sway Bars! They improve handling on the road, but that extra roll stiffness shows up big time on the campsite. There are two major brands: Roadmaster and Hellwig. They are the SAME Steel and the SAME specs. Both use hard poly bushings. Difference is you can buy Hellwig for about half the price of Roadmaster.
Cousin_Eddie93 wrote:I am in full agreement with these two comments. The solution is best addressed by replacing the original/stock front and rear stabilizer bars with heavy duty versions (also referred to as anti-sway or sway bars) which greatly improve the handling of the rig when driving as well as stabilizing the rig when parked. You can perform THIS SIMPLE TEST to determine if your rig will benefit from heavy duty front and rear stabilizers bars. If so, I'd surely go with the Hellwig brand to save some serious money.
.....the Hellwig sway stablizers make the rig nearly unshakable, even when cleaning the pipes with DW.
โJun-25-2016 07:38 PM
โJun-25-2016 06:37 AM
Claybe wrote:klutchdust wrote:
I camp in the desert, on the dry lake bed especially, and the stabilizers make a huge difference when the wind kicks up. Last trip I put my slides in because of the wind.
What kind of stabilizers do you have?
โJun-24-2016 10:52 AM
klutchdust wrote:
I camp in the desert, on the dry lake bed especially, and the stabilizers make a huge difference when the wind kicks up. Last trip I put my slides in because of the wind.
โJun-24-2016 10:10 AM
โJun-24-2016 06:27 AM
โJun-23-2016 08:33 PM
โJun-23-2016 11:51 AM
DrewE wrote:Maestro402 wrote:
I'm glad I searched for this topic. Last weekend my family bought our first RV a Class C. We didn't opt to spend the extra money for the auto leveling feature. We instead decided we'd just use the blocks.
I was looking at scissor jacks and what not for ideas to stabilize. Sounds like it might be best to just try w/o anything first. Ya'll Agree?
Along those same lines. Is it a good idea to buy the slide supports or step support? I guess my concern from a mechanical standpoint is that if I don't stabilize the main chassis well then putting slide support in is pointless if not dangerous to slide rods.
Thanks
Definitely try without any stabilizers. It's generally easier and cheaper to not add stuff than to add stuff, and when the stuff is unneeded, it's wasted effort and money.
If your slide or steps required extra support, surely the factory would have supplied the extra supports gizmos with the RV as standard equipment. Any maker that sold an RV where the very basic features are entirely unusable by design would not last long, I suspect.
I don't use any supports on my steps. I don't have any slides to worry about supporting or not, which makes that decision very simple.
โJun-23-2016 10:55 AM
Maestro402 wrote:
I'm glad I searched for this topic. Last weekend my family bought our first RV a Class C. We didn't opt to spend the extra money for the auto leveling feature. We instead decided we'd just use the blocks.
I was looking at scissor jacks and what not for ideas to stabilize. Sounds like it might be best to just try w/o anything first. Ya'll Agree?
Along those same lines. Is it a good idea to buy the slide supports or step support? I guess my concern from a mechanical standpoint is that if I don't stabilize the main chassis well then putting slide support in is pointless if not dangerous to slide rods.
Thanks
โJun-23-2016 08:39 AM
โMay-31-2016 08:14 PM
โMay-30-2016 08:45 PM
โMay-29-2016 07:08 AM
pnichols wrote:
That's what you get with a small Class C on the E450's rear leaf spring and front/rear torsion bar chassis .... unfortunately right along with a stiff ride when going down the road.
โMay-28-2016 10:42 PM