โApr-05-2016 02:01 PM
โApr-06-2016 08:17 PM
โApr-06-2016 05:07 PM
Jim@HiTek wrote:
I extended the jack that was 'stuck' (and then unstuck) when I got to my current RV park. The morning after arriving, I had to move the rig to a new spot to avoid some construction work going on in the park and darned if this time it didn't retract as fast as the others.
So I think that the problem solved itself for now. And I got myself a 6 foot long lever (2X4) to carry with me too, along with my floor jack. This will give me the time to try to find a new valve since there's no hurry on that part of the issue.
Thanks for everyone's advice...especially Doug's. Nothing like having a RV tech on the forum.
โApr-06-2016 12:21 PM
โApr-06-2016 11:17 AM
mabynack wrote:
Could be air in the system, too. If the fluid level was low at some point it could have allowed air to get in. You could bleed it by cracking a hydraulic line at the farthest jack and extending the jacks. Make sure someone is stationed near the reservoir to make sure it doesn't start sucking air again.
It could also be a collapsed hydraulic line. Sometimes they're hard to detect because the inside of the line collapses and the outside looks normal. Check for a pinched line. A hydraulic shop can check for flow at the cylinders and figure out if that's the problem.
โApr-06-2016 09:20 AM
โApr-06-2016 09:00 AM
โApr-06-2016 03:30 AM
โApr-05-2016 09:23 PM
โApr-05-2016 06:10 PM
โApr-05-2016 02:19 PM