โJul-16-2014 12:10 PM
โJul-17-2014 09:51 AM
pasusan wrote:Not at all.
You were the very first ...snip.. one to blame the older couple for having old and worn out gear and not having a clue about doing their maintenance.Maybe that was just a game to see how many people would jump on the bandwagon. :R
โJul-17-2014 09:49 AM
โJul-17-2014 05:54 AM
โJul-17-2014 05:51 AM
โJul-17-2014 05:36 AM
Tom/Barb wrote:robsouth wrote:
No it does not pull itself. I pull it with my daily driver truck. I don't know many folks who "daily drive" a class c or a, so it would be an additional engine, etc, since I have the truck to drive all the time, plus can pull the trailer with it without any additional worries.
Except the 4 extra wheels and tires.
IOWs you have 1 engine, 1 tranny, 1 differential to worry about, when going the road ,just like me. plus you have the trailer wheels.
Only mine are commercial units that have a life expectancy of a couple million miles.
โJul-17-2014 04:03 AM
2oldman wrote:So, you caught that, huh? ๐easycamper wrote:It's called sarcasm.Lynnmor wrote:Where's your evidence?It's much more likely for a trailer to be in tip top condition when it leaves the factory with new tires, bearings, and brakes than after years of service.
.... It had to be the owner. Always blame the victim even when you have no evidence of operator error.
โJul-17-2014 03:04 AM
2oldman wrote:easycamper wrote:It's called sarcasm.Lynnmor wrote:Where's your evidence?It's much more likely for a trailer to be in tip top condition when it leaves the factory with new tires, bearings, and brakes than after years of service.
.... It had to be the owner. Always blame the victim even when you have no evidence of operator error.
โJul-16-2014 10:15 PM
Lynnmor wrote:easycamper wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
It must be something that the owner did wrong. There is no way the carefully crafted trailer was less than perfect when built. The imported tires, bearings and spindles assembled perfectly couldn't fail. It had to be the owner. Always blame the victim even when you have no evidence of operator error.
Where's your evidence?
It's much more likely for a trailer to be in tip top condition when it leaves the factory with new tires, bearings, and brakes than after years of service.
Mine came with a severely bent axle, one brake not connected, little grease in bearings and extremely sloppy fit on hangers and Equa-Flex. But then I check that stuff and don't go by hearsay.
โJul-16-2014 09:31 PM
easycamper wrote:It's called sarcasm.Lynnmor wrote:Where's your evidence?It's much more likely for a trailer to be in tip top condition when it leaves the factory with new tires, bearings, and brakes than after years of service.
.... It had to be the owner. Always blame the victim even when you have no evidence of operator error.
โJul-16-2014 09:25 PM
โJul-16-2014 08:38 PM
โJul-16-2014 08:18 PM
โJul-16-2014 07:11 PM
easycamper wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
It must be something that the owner did wrong. There is no way the carefully crafted trailer was less than perfect when built. The imported tires, bearings and spindles assembled perfectly couldn't fail. It had to be the owner. Always blame the victim even when you have no evidence of operator error.
Where's your evidence?
It's much more likely for a trailer to be in tip top condition when it leaves the factory with new tires, bearings, and brakes than after years of service.
โJul-16-2014 06:58 PM
kaydeejay wrote:Mich F wrote:Errr, Mich, go read the original post again. It was the OP that bought a new trailer last Fall. There is no mention of the age of the TT that was billowing smoke.
And in this case, if some people had bothered to read the post where the OP stated that the couple bought the trailer new last fall, they might not be blaming the problem on a lack of maintenance. :h