โAug-27-2021 06:55 AM
โNov-01-2021 09:57 AM
โSep-02-2021 06:16 AM
JRscooby wrote:
What is wrong with that simple view point? Doesnโt need a discussion of gravity.
โSep-02-2021 06:08 AM
JRscooby wrote:
I can't stand under the "potentially several times".
โSep-02-2021 03:51 AM
vtraudt wrote:
I will use this method when 'driving back/forth' (potentially several times) is not an option. And certainly in my driveway (car/trailer under angle, incline and more than 4 inches to level sideways.
BB_TX wrote:
My simple brain looks at the whole frame bending thing in a much more simple way. An RV trailer sitting on dual axles is going to have 6-8-10โ hanging out past the rear axle. The weight supported by and spread over four suspension points on each side. And the weight of the RV is going to cause that rear cantilevered overhang portion to sag downward.
Now put jacks near the rear of the trailer and raise those jacks to level the trailer and that new upward force at the rear is going to start taking weigh off the suspension, and instead transfer that weight to the rear of the frame. Now the center of the frame with less support will tend to sag downward due to the transfer of points supporting that weight.
Lift at one rear corner more than the other and the frame will tend to twist.
What is wrong with that simple view point? Doesnโt need a discussion of gravity.
โSep-01-2021 07:52 PM
โSep-01-2021 01:23 PM
ajriding wrote:
Assuming you have a twin axle trailer?
You also said jacks, not stabilizers. Jacks can and will and are made to lift the trailer. We are not talking about stabilizers.
I lift the frame at the axle point. I used a bottle neck hydro jack, not scissors jack. For a dual axle I put the jack between the axles under the frame if possible, or as close to the axle as I can get if in front or behind the axles. This does not put any new stresses on the frame and lifts the frame at about where the axles hold the frame anyway. Or easier to just lift the axle, not the frame. One axle is fine and will not damage the frame, body, or door or bend anything. Your trailer goes on one axle all the time driving it around (one of 4 wheels unloaded anyway).
I do this only in extreme situations if I have to park off level and my other leveling method is too short.
Parking on ramps or boards or rocks is much preferred to me. It is easier than crawling around with a jack.
โAug-31-2021 09:59 AM
ajriding wrote:
Assuming you have a twin axle trailer?
You also said jacks, not stabilizers. Jacks can and will and are made to lift the trailer. We are not talking about stabilizers.
I lift the frame at the axle point. I used a bottle neck hydro jack, not scissors jack. For a dual axle I put the jack between the axles under the frame if possible, or as close to the axle as I can get if in front or behind the axles. This does not put any new stresses on the frame and lifts the frame at about where the axles hold the frame anyway. Or easier to just lift the axle, not the frame. One axle is fine and will not damage the frame, body, or door or bend anything. Your trailer goes on one axle all the time driving it around (one of 4 wheels unloaded anyway).
I do this only in extreme situations if I have to park off level and my other leveling method is too short.
Parking on ramps or boards or rocks is much preferred to me. It is easier than crawling around with a jack.
โAug-31-2021 09:44 AM
โAug-30-2021 01:19 PM
โAug-30-2021 07:20 AM
โAug-30-2021 05:21 AM
JRscooby wrote:vtraudt wrote:
You are correct (if you put your trailer into a no gravity zone (like outer space). You are my first alien contact on RV.Net.
If you would bring your trailer here on earth, gravity does do its bending thing, if you like it or not. In fact EVERYTHING on earth is bent (past tense), sometimes just bent into a straight line (I know, this will bend (present tense) your brain; double pun intended (yes, gravity bends even the stiffes brain on earth!).
This sounds like somebody educated beyond their intelligence, or acting stupid. Over the years I have bent a lot of steel, (most, but not all on purpose). I have had some sag under own weight when lifting 1 end.
But even a super light duty, like a garden cart, when loaded to capacity, you lift the tongue, the back goes down, but nothing bends. (If it did, you could not tow it without it bending.)
โAug-30-2021 04:31 AM
vtraudt wrote:
You are correct (if you put your trailer into a no gravity zone (like outer space). You are my first alien contact on RV.Net.
If you would bring your trailer here on earth, gravity does do its bending thing, if you like it or not. In fact EVERYTHING on earth is bent (past tense), sometimes just bent into a straight line (I know, this will bend (present tense) your brain; double pun intended (yes, gravity bends even the stiffes brain on earth!).
โAug-29-2021 04:38 PM
Huntindog wrote:
As for it not adding any strength, see the exerpt from my previous google quote:
Cambering beams allow smaller beams to be used in place of larger beams to support the same load.May 29, 2016.
(that is a very cost effective way of making an RV lighter.)
โAug-29-2021 04:26 PM
JRscooby wrote:vtraudt wrote:
Lifting at the 2 rear corners (the front is already lifted at the corner, the A frame (front jack) lifts the 2 front corners, and all the static bending is/has taken place every time you put your front jack down, or hook up your trailer to the car)
You must have some weird trailer. Other than the ones with floating tongue, any of the hundreds, if not thousands of trailers I have been around, jack the front up, the rear goes down. When pivot on the suspension, there is no force to flex the frame.