โAug-07-2019 07:28 AM
โAug-09-2019 07:23 AM
Gjac wrote:
Sounds like several on here have the Bigfoot levelers and are very happy with them. What is the approximate cost to purchase and install the levelers?
โAug-09-2019 06:32 AM
jcsb wrote:Sounds like several on here have the Bigfoot levelers and are very happy with them. What is the approximate cost to purchase and install the levelers?
Started out using the commercial leveling blocks and 2x8's. Have the level indicators. Generally worked ok especially on paved sites. A real pain while setting up in rain.
Added Bigfoot later. Found on sale and made the trip to the Mich. facility.
Now can set up without leaving coach except to make sure slides will extend without hitting anything. Can reset if the coach settles after a day or two when on sandy sites.
Don't get soaked during a rain store while setting up.
โAug-08-2019 08:41 PM
โAug-08-2019 03:06 PM
โAug-08-2019 01:32 PM
โAug-08-2019 12:42 PM
ron.dittmer wrote:I think I did also. Are you saying a new Class C would have a bad suspension from the factory and will have also have poor handling? I never drove one but walked through a few new ones at shows and noticed some movement. They seemed to move more than my Class A when I rocked it back and forth with just my body.Gjac wrote:I think you missed my point of addressng two completely different issues with one solution.ron.dittmer wrote:For $2000 wouldn't one be better off just to add the Big foot leveling system and eliminate the movement from the suspension?
If your rig significantly moves with you walking around inside it, that indicates a lot more movement is happening when you drive it, noticed as poor handling. It is a very common condition. A reasonably easy improvement are heavy duty front and rear stabilizer bars and shock absorbers. Heavy duty Helwig bars and heavy duty Bistein shocks are most popular for affordability without sacrifice to effectiveness.
To the original poster, a short 21 footer on an E350 to a long 32 footer on an E450, unwanted movement is common-place. Adding a full-length slide-out will amplify the situation. Plan on getting the heavy duty upgrades. Plan on spending roughly $1500-$2000 to have a shop give you full service. Finding internet deals and installing everything yourself will save you around two/third that cost.
โAug-08-2019 12:04 PM
blownstang01 wrote:
I installed Bigfoot Levelers on our 31' Winnebago C, Love Them ! Previously,without jacks my 14 year old son who sleeps in the over the cab bunk who rock the whole RV while turning over in his sleep. Now, it's quite solid. Obviously, the leggo blocks worked fine, but Bigfoot had a sale and I'm very happy I did them.
โAug-08-2019 09:37 AM
Gjac wrote:I think you missed my point of addressng two completely different issues with one solution.ron.dittmer wrote:For $2000 wouldn't one be better off just to add the Big foot leveling system and eliminate the movement from the suspension?
If your rig significantly moves with you walking around inside it, that indicates a lot more movement is happening when you drive it, noticed as poor handling. It is a very common condition. A reasonably easy improvement are heavy duty front and rear stabilizer bars and shock absorbers. Heavy duty Helwig bars and heavy duty Bistein shocks are most popular for affordability without sacrifice to effectiveness.
To the original poster, a short 21 footer on an E350 to a long 32 footer on an E450, unwanted movement is common-place. Adding a full-length slide-out will amplify the situation. Plan on getting the heavy duty upgrades. Plan on spending roughly $1500-$2000 to have a shop give you full service. Finding internet deals and installing everything yourself will save you around two/third that cost.
โAug-08-2019 06:10 AM
โAug-08-2019 04:50 AM
ron.dittmer wrote:For $2000 wouldn't one be better off just to add the Big foot leveling system and eliminate the movement from the suspension?
If your rig significantly moves with you walking around inside it, that indicates a lot more movement is happening when you drive it, noticed as poor handling. It is a very common condition. A reasonably easy improvement are heavy duty front and rear stabilizer bars and shock absorbers. Heavy duty Helwig bars and heavy duty Bistein shocks are most popular for affordability without sacrifice to effectiveness.
To the original poster, a short 21 footer on an E350 to a long 32 footer on an E450, unwanted movement is common-place. Adding a full-length slide-out will amplify the situation. Plan on getting the heavy duty upgrades. Plan on spending roughly $1500-$2000 to have a shop give you full service. Finding internet deals and installing everything yourself will save you around two/third that cost.
โAug-07-2019 02:49 PM
โAug-07-2019 01:41 PM
โAug-07-2019 01:35 PM
DrewE wrote:camperdave wrote:
I did install A Levelmate Pro though, which tells you exactly how many inches each wheel needs to be raised. I really like it, level first shot every time
When I first got my class C, I used some math to make a little leveling ruler calibrated in the number of ramps (2x wooden ones, in my case) needed to achieve leveling, one side for left-to-right leveling and the other for front-to-back leveling. I'd take my level and special ruler, set the level on the floor, and lift whichever end was low and measure how many ramps were needed. It worked very nicely indeed.
Pretty soon, I was able to eyeball the distance from the raised level end and didn't really need the ruler. Not long after that the level got lost and was replaced with one that's a different length, which of course throws the ruler calibration all off, and I haven't made a new one.
โAug-07-2019 12:47 PM
camperdave wrote:
I did install A Levelmate Pro though, which tells you exactly how many inches each wheel needs to be raised. I really like it, level first shot every time