โSep-24-2022 08:07 PM
โOct-07-2022 10:35 AM
โOct-07-2022 09:42 AM
โSep-26-2022 08:10 AM
โSep-26-2022 08:10 AM
โSep-26-2022 07:52 AM
โSep-25-2022 08:01 PM
Pbutler97 wrote:
If you know what you're looking at, and crawl under most travel trailers that were built in the last 10 years or so and are on a Lippert frame, you might have second thoughts before you jack it up to change a tire let alone jacking the entire thing up off the ground to level it.
โSep-25-2022 07:51 PM
โSep-25-2022 07:10 PM
โSep-25-2022 06:05 PM
โSep-25-2022 04:51 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
How hard is it to toss a board under the trailer wheels and pull onto the board?
Answer, pretty easy.
How hard to toss boards under two or more wheels of a motor home?
Answer, not as easy as a trailer.
They do make levels with markings in 1 inch increments that takes most of the guess work out of leveling a trailer.
When you get to your site, check the side to side level before unhitching, place your wood or plastic leveling blocks in front or behind the trailer wheels then pull on to the blocks. Now you have side to side done.
โSep-25-2022 02:42 PM
DallasSteve wrote:
Gdetrailer
Thanks for those tips. Maybe that's the better solution. Are the stabilizers/tongue lift usually manual? Can I use something like an electric screwdriver?
โSep-25-2022 01:58 PM
โSep-25-2022 10:57 AM
โSep-25-2022 10:12 AM
LMHS wrote:
I was always given to understand that one really shouldn't lift any camper/motorhome off the ground and not have the tires supported. I know that it caused problems with the suspension on an Eagle bus to have it's tires unsupported.