โOct-05-2016 06:14 AM
โOct-05-2016 08:19 AM
DutchmenSport wrote:
And ... to respond to another poster's idea of facing the camper directly into the wind.... yes ... this is the best way. But the problem is... a hurricane is passing up the coast. Which way do you point the camper as the wind direction will be changing and shifting?
โOct-05-2016 08:14 AM
โOct-05-2016 07:54 AM
DutchmenSport wrote:
And ... to respond to another poster's idea of facing the camper directly into the wind.... yes ... this is the best way. But the problem is... a hurricane is passing up the coast. Which way do you point the camper as the wind direction will be changing and shifting?
โOct-05-2016 07:52 AM
sflabrkr wrote:
I'm sitting here on the farm in a 45' RV in Ft. Lauderdale waiting for Hurricane Mathew. There is no way I can move the RV because the ground is too soft. My question is, do I leave the jacks down or do I raise them? I'm thinking raising them makes more sense. I will bring in my slides. Any other things I should do?
Stefan
โOct-05-2016 07:49 AM
โOct-05-2016 07:34 AM
stvdman wrote:
This was a pretty specific question due to the storm, not about the storm itself.
I learned something. As I would have raised mine, put something under them to give them a bigger "footprint" and then lowered them just enough to absorb some weight of the chassis, so there would be 10-12 (guess a 45' RV has tag axle?) points (6-8 tires 4 jackstands) spreading the coach weight onto the ground.
โOct-05-2016 07:17 AM
โOct-05-2016 06:41 AM
-Gramps- wrote:
Don't leave them down with soft ground and high wind, they could get damaged better to let the coach rock then damage a jack leg. Do the same things you would do if driving this coach at seventy miles an hour down the road.
โOct-05-2016 06:37 AM
โOct-05-2016 06:21 AM
โOct-05-2016 06:19 AM