BettyToo wrote:
I've been under and measured the axel with a straight edge, it appears ok, a slight upwards curve, which I believe is correct. I have also measured the Toe in and that's about 3/8". So question is (other than 4 new tires) what should I be looking for with regard to camber on the front and rear and what should the toe in be? Is 3/8s too much? Is this what's causing the outside wear? Any help advice greatly appreciated.
Thanks all...
Hi,
I ran into a situation back in 2008 on my camper. After much investigation I found the problem and corrected it. I had 2 axles made with the wrong toe angle from day 1, (created excessive toe out) I had a front leaf spring hanger welded on wrong from day 1, (created thrust angle issues) and the rear axle hanger was welded on wrong too. (created the front and rear axle to not be parallel).
This post shows how I backed into finding the problem and by how much things where off
Tire Wear Pattern-Tandem Axle TT (Pic's) Where to look nextThe correction started with creating adjustable axle seats to properly align the front axle to the tow ball, and then align the rear axle parallel to the front axle. Then 2 new axle tubes within spec where installed. I was able to hit the alignment numbers declared by Dexter. The system has now tracked and wears tires even now ever since. You can measure the tire wear across the face of the tire and it tells a story to what that wheel is doing. However there are a few ways that wear can be created. This post was the correction. It also lists the alignment specs I found. The toe spec is in degrees of angle. You will have to do the math to convert your 3/8" measurement back to degrees. You did not say how and where you measured that, but 3/8" is a real big number.
TT axle alignment & install - Detailed (long lot's of pics)There is a lot of detail in there that may help you. And you can see what you will be up against and if your home shop can accommodate it. If you can't, you need to find a trailer alignment shop that works on trailers. It does not have to be an RV dealer, as I myself could not find an RV dealer in my area that had the alignment equipment to even verify the problem. They just change parts sent by the camper mfg. Shops that work on semi trailers do this kind of work too. And there are some shops that can bend the axles tubes to create proper alignment. I did not want to go the bend a tube way, I just bought new axle tubes.
Hope this helps
John
2005 Ford F350 Super Duty, 4x4; 6.8L V10 with 4.10 RA, 21,000 GCWR, 11,000 GVWR, upgraded 2 1/2" Towbeast Receiver. Hitched with a 1,700# Reese HP WD, HP Dual Cam to a 2004 Sunline Solaris T310R travel trailer.