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valve stem points inside on rear dual tires?

Cooncatz
Explorer
Explorer
I purchased a 98 Four Winds Class C in December and it has been parked since I brought it home. The snow is about gone so I wanted to check the air in the tires; but the valve stem on the rear outside tires are pointed inward and I can't see the stems on the inside tires - I assume I will have to crawl under the unit to check them.

Is this unusual - are the tires mounted incorrectly - is there a fix for this.
thanks
44 REPLIES 44

dicknellen
Explorer II
Explorer II
j-d wrote:
We have Borg Dually Valves HERE
Great fit, durability, customer service.
Many have been fortunate to find parts that work at truck tire shops and some have found shops that will customize stock valves to fit RV needs. Some have home-brew rigs to get caps off, gauge on, air in, etc. Good for them, but the point is that good valves solve the air checking problems. And, they prevent slow leaks as well as catastrophic failures. Think of this:

1. BEST is a custom one piece heavy duty brass or steel valve

2. Extenders are OK if they're Braided Cover AND Airless, connected to METAL valves

3. NEVER put ANY extension/adapter/extender on RUBBER Valves

4. Replace Rubber with Metal (any kind!) at first opportunity

5. Class C's and probably everything American with 16, 16.5 or 19" wheels have .453" valve holes. Big truck wheels have .625" holes, so that reduces some of our choices when we go to truck stops and HD tire dealers.

Thing I like about our Borg Valves is that I can check and inflate anywhere. Bicycle pump, convenience store, interstate truck stop, doesn't matter. I carry a dual-footed gauge like shown above, but I can check just as easily with a free Discount/America's Tire gauge.

OH! Also added "Air Through" valve caps. Those rascals keep dirt out, provide a secondary air seal, and no unscrewing. Just push the gauge or air chuck onto them. They go by Gator, Crocodile, V2B. Available Amazon, NAPA...

I can check six tires in as many minutes and find that they still don't need air after months. We have Bridgestone R250's from Discount Tire. Between those tires, Discount's mounting, and the Borg Valves, adding air is about a twice-yearly process. Mostly when the seasons change and affect tire pressure. Drudgery became Pleasure.


X 2 I also have Borg extenders, they are great.

geeman53
Explorer
Explorer
tenbear wrote:
The valves on mine both point outwards and are easy to check the pressure and add air. Sounds to me like someone installed the wheeels wrong. If you have the tools you could jack up the RV and reinstall the wheels, otherwise, I think almost any garage could do the job.


X2 The inside valves point to the outer rims, easy to check and fill w/ a long air chuck.
2016 forest river sunseeker 2250 slec

j-d
Explorer II
Explorer II
We have Borg Dually Valves HERE
Great fit, durability, customer service.
Many have been fortunate to find parts that work at truck tire shops and some have found shops that will customize stock valves to fit RV needs. Some have home-brew rigs to get caps off, gauge on, air in, etc. Good for them, but the point is that good valves solve the air checking problems. And, they prevent slow leaks as well as catastrophic failures. Think of this:

1. BEST is a custom one piece heavy duty brass or steel valve

2. Extenders are OK if they're Braided Cover AND Airless, connected to METAL valves

3. NEVER put ANY extension/adapter/extender on RUBBER Valves

4. Replace Rubber with Metal (any kind!) at first opportunity

5. Class C's and probably everything American with 16, 16.5 or 19" wheels have .453" valve holes. Big truck wheels have .625" holes, so that reduces some of our choices when we go to truck stops and HD tire dealers.

Thing I like about our Borg Valves is that I can check and inflate anywhere. Bicycle pump, convenience store, interstate truck stop, doesn't matter. I carry a dual-footed gauge like shown above, but I can check just as easily with a free Discount/America's Tire gauge.

OH! Also added "Air Through" valve caps. Those rascals keep dirt out, provide a secondary air seal, and no unscrewing. Just push the gauge or air chuck onto them. They go by Gator, Crocodile, V2B. Available Amazon, NAPA...

I can check six tires in as many minutes and find that they still don't need air after months. We have Bridgestone R250's from Discount Tire. Between those tires, Discount's mounting, and the Borg Valves, adding air is about a twice-yearly process. Mostly when the seasons change and affect tire pressure. Drudgery became Pleasure.
If God's Your Co-Pilot Move Over, jd
2003 Jayco Escapade 31A on 2002 Ford E450 V10 4R100 218" WB

want-a-be
Explorer
Explorer
I had the same problem! I just loosen the valve stem and turned it so I could get a gauge on it.
Good Luck

1971duster340
Explorer
Explorer
Look into Dual Dynamics' Crossfire Tire Pressure Equalization System or Valve Stem Extenders. You can add air to duals at one easy access valve.
Greg
N5LFH
2007 Chariot

IAMICHABOD
Explorer II
Explorer II
Cooncatz wrote:
Is there any more information on Tire Man extenders.

Here is a few page from years back that may be of help,some of the links are old and don't work but the info is good.
The kit looks like this.


The long ones go to the inside duel,coming out one of the holes in the wheel,the curved ones are for the outside duel facing out thru another hole and the short ones go on the front. Making it easy to check and fill your tires.
2006 TIOGA 26Q CHEVY 6.0 WORKHORSE VORTEC
Former El Monte RV Rental
Retired Teamster Local 692
Buying A Rental Class C

Ivylog
Explorer III
Explorer III
$5 :S
This post is my opinion (free advice). It is not intended to influence anyone's judgment nor do I advocate anyone do what I propose.
Sold 04 Dynasty to our son after 14 great years.
Upgraded with a 08 HR Navigator 45’...

KD4UPL
Explorer
Explorer
Your situation is normal. You need the tire chuck that is made for duallys that faces both ways. Also, a gauge with the same type of head.

Cooncatz
Explorer
Explorer
Is there any more information on Tire Man extenders.

crasster
Explorer II
Explorer II
NWboondocker wrote:
A dual head gauge/inflator might help.


This! Also I have extenders... Cheapies. I just do not leave them installed all the time, but manually screw them on when I need them. Just a cheaper way to do it than buy expensive ones.
4 whopping cylinders on Toyota RV's. Talk about great getting good MPG. Also I have a very light foot on the pedal. I followed some MPG advice on Livingpress.com and I now get 22 MPG! Not bad for a home on wheels.

IAMICHABOD
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have to agree about the Tire Man valve stems,they make it easy and fast to check the tire pressure.
DO NOT put the extenders on them,they have a tendency to leak and if they come loose they can cause a catastrophic air loss. You need solid valve stems,many of us have these.

To check and fill the tires with the valve stems you describe you will need a duel headed inflator Like this
2006 TIOGA 26Q CHEVY 6.0 WORKHORSE VORTEC
Former El Monte RV Rental
Retired Teamster Local 692
Buying A Rental Class C

NWboondocker
Explorer
Explorer
A dual head gauge/inflator might help.
'13 Coachmen Freelander 26QB

tenbear
Explorer
Explorer
The valves on mine both point outwards and are easy to check the pressure and add air. Sounds to me like someone installed the wheeels wrong. If you have the tools you could jack up the RV and reinstall the wheels, otherwise, I think almost any garage could do the job.
Class C, 2004/5 Four Winds Dutchman Express 28A, Chevy chassis
2010 Subaru Impreza Sedan
Camped in 45 states, 7 Provinces and 1 Territory

bobsinn
Explorer
Explorer
I had these installed on my E450
Tire-man
Best $200 (installed) that I have spent on the RV
2001 Itasca Sundancer 27P
2000 Honda Civic

Hemi_RT
Explorer
Explorer
This is normal with dual rear wheels. You can buy extenders to route them to the outside; go to a tire shop, they should have them but get the best ones you can get as the cheap ones seem to cause problems.