Because our MH is in storage a long ways away, we borrowed a friends 2004 Fleetwood Expedition 39S. It's built on a Freightliner chassis with a Cat C7 340HP and Allison. Less than 40,000 miles and well maintained. His MH is very similar to ours, so I'm familiar with everything on it. While I'd like to solve what happened to his MH, I'd also like to know incase the same thing happens on ours.
When I was returning it to them, the dash warning lights went crazy. On the dash above the steering wheel there are two rows of about 15 lights. These are the standard idiot warning lights covering such things as turn indicators, low air pressure, air brakes set, system charging, etc.
While driving down the road, all of a sudden the lights started flashing one at a time. As I said, there are two rows of them. The top left light would flash first, then each succeeding light would flash from the very left one to the very right one. Then on the second row of lights, the very right would flash succeeding through all of them on the second row, to the very left one. After the left most light on the second row flashed, the flashing would reverse itself all the way back up through the second row again. The flashes were very bright, very quick and in various colors - it looked like I had a cop car on the dash with all of it's lights flashing.
The MH continued to run and operate fine. No problems with power, engine, brakes, air pressure, etc. Since I only had a little ways to where I was stopping for fuel, I proceeded down the road. When I stopped to fill with propane, the flashing stopped. I started it, moved to fuel. The MH ran for about two minutes and the flashing started again. After filling the fuel (it needed about 15 gal) I drove it to my friends house - the light show did not start again. I started and stopped it at his house several times without a repeat of the dash lights.
Any ideas?
Bill
Nodwell RN110 out moose hunting. 4-53 Detroit, Clark 5 spd, 40" wide tracks, 10:00x20 tires, 16,000# capacity, 22,000# weight. You know the mud is getting deep when it's coming in the doors.