Aug-30-2013 05:05 AM
May-30-2014 12:13 PM
May-28-2014 05:40 PM
Bisker wrote:BillyW wrote:Bisker wrote:Read Barney's statement carefully. 🙂BarneyS wrote:
You should ALWAYS chock both sides of the trailer. Not doing so will invite a runaway tongue someday when you lift the coupler off the ball. Hope nobody is standing next to the tongue when that happens.:E
By the way, the chocks should be the first thing to go down after you arrive at the campsite and get the trailer level. Do this BEFORE you disconnect from the tow vehicle.
Barney
How do you get the trailer on leveling blocks if you already chocked the trailer?
Actually saw that right after I posted, but if you do it after the trailer is level it's not the first thing you do. My apologies, I am a technical writer and I get called on stuff like this all the time, lol.
May-28-2014 04:23 PM
BillyW wrote:Bisker wrote:Read Barney's statement carefully. 🙂BarneyS wrote:
You should ALWAYS chock both sides of the trailer. Not doing so will invite a runaway tongue someday when you lift the coupler off the ball. Hope nobody is standing next to the tongue when that happens.:E
By the way, the chocks should be the first thing to go down after you arrive at the campsite and get the trailer level. Do this BEFORE you disconnect from the tow vehicle.
Barney
How do you get the trailer on leveling blocks if you already chocked the trailer?
May-28-2014 01:08 PM
May-28-2014 01:04 PM
Bisker wrote:Read Barney's statement carefully. 🙂BarneyS wrote:
You should ALWAYS chock both sides of the trailer. Not doing so will invite a runaway tongue someday when you lift the coupler off the ball. Hope nobody is standing next to the tongue when that happens.:E
By the way, the chocks should be the first thing to go down after you arrive at the campsite and get the trailer level. Do this BEFORE you disconnect from the tow vehicle.
Barney
How do you get the trailer on leveling blocks if you already chocked the trailer?
May-28-2014 12:48 PM
BarneyS wrote:
You should ALWAYS chock both sides of the trailer. Not doing so will invite a runaway tongue someday when you lift the coupler off the ball. Hope nobody is standing next to the tongue when that happens.:E
By the way, the chocks should be the first thing to go down after you arrive at the campsite and get the trailer level. Do this BEFORE you disconnect from the tow vehicle.
Barney
May-28-2014 10:39 AM
May-21-2014 04:42 PM
May-21-2014 03:37 PM
May-21-2014 11:35 AM
May-20-2014 07:27 PM
May-20-2014 01:59 PM
May-19-2014 02:04 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:
I think you should cut the leading edges at a 45 degree cut, and 1 1/2 (2x8/10) would be sufficient. 3/4 is being too extreme. just be sure you use boards that are wide enough to support the sidewalls of your tires.
bumpy
May-19-2014 01:50 PM
ECones wrote:
We just got our first travel trailer, and a search for leveling tips brought me here. I had planned to build a leveling tool from a single 2 x 8. What I planned was something like the drawing below. The bottom piece would be 36", then working up, 27", 18", and the top 9". Total height would 6", which is more than I ever plan to need, but I'd hoped I wouldn't get over-zealous and drive off the front, so the extra level is a safety precaution.
The plan is to simply place this in front of the tire on the low side and pull, raising it 1.5" at a time until it's close. If one is too low and one is too high, I could get it high, put a piece of 1 x 8 in the lower slot and back off to it. With this and a single 1 x 8 I could adjust in 3/4" increments.
Go easy on me now; I'm a newby 😉
But is 3/4" increments too picky? Not picky enough?
Is this a goofy idea completely?