Oct-27-2014 02:12 PM
Oct-28-2014 03:57 PM
Oct-28-2014 03:27 PM
Oct-28-2014 03:20 PM
BossCamper wrote:ashnic wrote:
I put ours in storage about 1/2 hr. away inside a large barn. I have been told never to store with the jacks extended. If a tire happens to go down during the winter the stablizer jack will be forced to hold the weight which they are not made to do..just my 2 cents..
I'll add 2 cents to that!
Oct-28-2014 02:40 PM
ashnic wrote:
I put ours in storage about 1/2 hr. away inside a large barn. I have been told never to store with the jacks extended. If a tire happens to go down during the winter the stablizer jack will be forced to hold the weight which they are not made to do..just my 2 cents..
Oct-28-2014 01:34 PM
Oct-28-2014 11:37 AM
Oct-28-2014 11:21 AM
Oct-28-2014 11:17 AM
DutchmenSport wrote:
We park our TT at home in the driveway. My jacks are down all the time. The drive is pretty level, slight down hill slope. Why do I keep the jacks down all the time when parked at home?
Wind. I have the camper parked facing West (front) to East (rear). We get very strong winds from the West to East, so the trailer is parked facing the wind 99% of the time. With the jacks down, it makes it even more difficult for movement. The strongest wind we've had in the last couple years has been 45 mph. That might not be enough to move the camper head on, but the previous house we lived in, the trailer did move in the wind because I did not have the jacks down. Tongue jack almost slipped off the block. If it would have fallen, it would have sunk the tongue jack into the gravel, probably all the way to the A-frame. So, with extra contact points on the ground (5 of them that do not roll), the odds of wind moving the camper are minimized.
Second, we use the camper a lot in the drive way. It's another bed room, a get-away, a home office (as my router wifi from the house reaches outside just fine and I do a lot of work from home), and it's just a nice get away sometimes to watch the television or listen to music.
Third, as I live in the country and am gone a lot, it gives me a little more comfort knowing if the jacks are down, it makes it a little more difficult for someone to just drive in, hitch up and take off with the camper. (Theft). With jacks down, they'd have to take an extra minute to get them raised up to hitch. That extra minute might be just the deterrent to prevent theft.
Fourth, it just makes me feel better.
FYI, when the weather predicts those high winds, I'll often lower the nose facing the West.
I also always put the jacks down with my previous trailer too:
Oct-28-2014 10:58 AM
Oct-28-2014 09:30 AM
Oct-28-2014 08:07 AM
Oct-28-2014 07:56 AM
Oct-28-2014 03:49 AM
Oct-27-2014 06:51 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:
Wind. I have the camper parked facing West (front) to East (rear). We get very strong winds from the West to East, so the trailer is parked facing the wind 99% of the time. With the jacks down, it makes it even more difficult for movement.