โApr-16-2006 09:17 AM
โMay-26-2018 10:58 AM
blownstang01 wrote:Unless she's the one who put them on, herself.tomman58 wrote:
Try them on the wife they are good for that also, He HE
It would be near impossible to be far enough away once you cut them off though...
โMay-24-2018 10:34 AM
tomman58 wrote:
Try them on the wife they are good for that also, He HE
โMay-24-2018 06:44 AM
โMay-21-2018 12:05 PM
โMay-21-2018 10:04 AM
โMay-21-2018 06:05 AM
โMay-21-2018 05:18 AM
โMay-17-2018 11:35 AM
โMay-17-2018 07:50 AM
Gruu wrote:time to revisit this post......UV zip ties from Consolidated Electric lasted me from Feb 2013 to Mar 2018 when I traded the trailer. They didn't fail in those 5 years....so they will be my choice for the MH which I traded the TT for....So, for the price of 6 zip ties and the ease of using them IMO that's the way to go....Lady Fitzgerald wrote:Can they be installed without using the tensioner, it looks quite expensive.LTCLarry wrote:popeye59 wrote:I used UV rated ties. Picked them up at Consolidated Electric. Is there another reason?LTCLarry wrote:DE88ROX wrote:Why?
Dump the zip ties for some good old fashioned stainless hose clamps. The kind you tighten with a screwdriver.
Because the non-UV rated zip ties deteriorate relatively quickly, whereas the UV rated ones (which come in many colors besides black), last much longer.
Even the UV rated ties are only UV resistant, not UV proof. They still will eventually fail, probably sooner than you think (I'm speaking from experience here). You have a several thousand dollar RV (probably tens of thousands)yet you want to cheap out and use the zip ties? The stainless hose clamps are stronger and pretty much last forever.
โMay-17-2018 07:16 AM
suerover wrote:could you post some pics of that ....just bought a MH and need to do something as well
We installed an Ikea wire drawer system in the bottom of our closet.
โMay-10-2018 10:21 AM
โMar-12-2018 12:31 PM
โMar-11-2018 06:08 PM
โMar-11-2018 01:27 PM
โMar-11-2018 10:57 AM