โJan-10-2019 04:57 PM
โJan-28-2019 09:18 PM
โJan-15-2019 12:41 PM
โJan-14-2019 03:30 PM
profdant139 wrote:
Thanks for posting that photo! Very helpful.
โJan-14-2019 01:14 PM
โJan-14-2019 12:43 PM
profdant139 wrote:
rockhill mentioned the issue of slipping. Whether I put a piece of plywood under the stack or over it, the plywood does not stay perfectly in place. The Lynx blocks, of course, move as a unit, since they are interconnected.
โJan-14-2019 11:29 AM
โJan-14-2019 10:51 AM
profdant139 wrote:I error on leaning the trailer to the side where the fresh water pick-up is in the tank.... left side. Never tried to get it more level than that.
We use those Lynx blocks (they look like giant Legos) to level our trailer. Works well, does not slip, easy to store and to clean.
But every so often, a stack two blocks high is not enough, while three blocks are too many.
Has anyone developed a halfway step? I tried to make one out of wood and it did not work well -- it tended to slip out of place as I drove the trailer up onto the stack of blocks.
Thanks in advance for your ideas and advice!
โJan-14-2019 09:26 AM
โJan-14-2019 08:39 AM
โJan-14-2019 06:38 AM
โJan-14-2019 05:37 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJan-14-2019 02:24 AM
fj12ryder wrote:bucky wrote:Some people may be fine that way, others, including the OP, are not. He was asking for suggestions that will help with his wife's inability to tolerate out-of-level conditions. A little tolerance is a wonderful thing.
We sure get bored in the colder months don't we. I've seen RVs more than a foot out of level more than once and the occupants were happy as clams.
โJan-13-2019 07:55 AM
โJan-13-2019 07:52 AM