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Jack Failure Disaster

DanLevitan
Explorer
Explorer
I had a terrible experience yesterday when I tried to unload my camper which resulted in my camper falling over on its side in my front yard. It happened so fast I'm not exactly sure where it went wrong. I'm new to truck camper loading and unloading and have only done it three times before so my experience level is likely a contributing factor but hope to get input so I can never have another jack disaster.

Shortly after I drove my truck out from under my camper and began lowering it things start going literally sideways. I have manual crank corner mounted jacks and use my cordless to lower in about two inch increments rotating to each jack. I think I was on my second rotation around the camper when I noticed the camper was twisting on the jacks. When the right rear foot was behind the camper rather than beside it I new things were different than my previous attempts. I was able to kick the foot back towards the side but that only amplified the twist on the other jacks. I went back to the previous jack and went up some thinking I could undo whatever influence I was causing but I saw the mount beginning to peel off the camper. At this point I knew it was a lost cause and had to bail out as the jacks on the other side folded under and the camper dropped. It took a visit from a recovery company to upright it to it's current legless resting spot in my front lawn. Thank goodness I don't have an HOA because it's not going anywhere fast. The damage was actually less than expected but still several weekends worth. I have spent the last year and a half going through this camper from top to bottom including removing most of the skin and replacing lots and lots of rotten wood. It made my heart ache to see it on the ground.

A little background. This camper originally used three wing mounted tripod jacks to do the heavy lifting. Some models had a fancy Safe-T-Jack system but this one didn't. Only two of the original rusty jacks and one mounting bracket remained when I took possession. The others had rotted away and were lost. During the rebuild of structure I decided to beef up the corners to accommodate four Reico Titan manual corner jacks. I remember being reluctant when the new jack mounts came with wood screws but I decided to trust the process and that's what I used. No though bolts. Possibly corners mounts were not as strong as they should have been.

Other possible factors. Last week I upgraded the water tank from a 10 gallon to a 27 gallon. I had filled it up for a leak check. I didn't think to empty the tank prior to unloading the camper so it weighed a good 230 pounds heavier than prior attempts. I haven't yet weighed this camper but I guess its 3000ish.

The hard pack ground where I was unloading the camper was nearly level, but not exactly level. It was not windy.

Maybe this was a combination of factors but I'm reaching out so I can try and learn as much as possible for next time.
69 REPLIES 69

notsobigjoe
Nomad III
Nomad III
DanLevitan wrote:
Yes the rear mounts only had the upper portion. I can see where I would have benefitted from having the lower mounts too. Also check out this picture of the twisted swinging bracket. Its pretty gnarly. It was the front left. The one that peeled off. The left rear then seems to have folded under and doesn't have any twist to it.


So OP I think were all pretty much in agreement bout the jack situation. The brackets on the camper side are unimpressive to say the least. Here's a picture of mine.

Front

Rear

outside rear

Box of new brackets when I removed the stable-lift a couple of years ago.

Lower attachment point on the rears.


I'm certainly not saying that your jacks needs are the same as mine because obviously I don't know. But all in all I think this was the problem whether front was too high, too low etc.... Don't let it get you down. Fixit and go camping. How about some pics of the inside, Did you remodel that part?

On my coachman Ranger which we bought from a friend I noticed one night the center of the cabover bed was sinking. The next morning I looked and with weight on it it was touching the roof of the cab. Completely rotted. That was back in my drinking days and didn't know how to do anything. Me and my dad fixed it and used for six more years.

BurbMan
Explorer II
Explorer II
silversand wrote:
Without doing an on-site forensic, did the legs lower onto a thick mat of long-leaf pine needles (I've slid badly on pine needles in the past)? If the jack's landing pads were lowered onto the teflon-like slippy needles on hard packed ground, they (one landing pad) could have just slipped out (like walking on ice), and caused a cascade of instability with the other pads/legs, and the weak point, the jack attachments, just let go one at a time (even well connected)....Just a thought....


joerg68 wrote:
I have personally watched the third leg of a three legged camper loosing footing on a patch of ice and folding under ... with much the same result.


I think the solution is in this line of thinking....it may not have been necessarily a weak jack attaching point but could have been a lack of traction with the jack plate that cause it to slide, placing way too much lateral force on the mounting point and leading to a cascading overload event?

JimK-NY
Explorer II
Explorer II
Looking at the pictures of the aftermath, it is not clear to me what went wrong. I would consider the following:

Does the camper have suitable structure to support the jacks? Those skimpy wood screws do not point in that direction. My brackets are attached into solid wood with long, heavy lag bolts.

Were the jacks properly aligned at the start? All 4 need to point straight down with no forward-back or side to side canting.

Was the ground really hard and suitable? Did you use support blocks to distribute the weight for the jacks?

Did you jack up the camper keeping the front higher or at least level with the back and distributing the weight as well as possible on all of the jacks? I recommend using levels, front and back, side to side to help with this.

Did the camper and support start on level ground? It looks like there is considerable slope downward to the right and also downward to the back. That would put a lot of pressure on the right rear jack also make it difficult to maintain a level camper with even weight distribution on the jacks.

joerg68
Nomad III
Nomad III
So one of the front jacks failed first. That is not surprising as they carry more weight. Would it have failed in the same way if the rear jacks had been anchored at the bottom? Maybe, maybe not. In any case the bending loads in the rear get much more evenly distributed that way, and there is much less possibility for flex overall. But the front jacks are still standing free and the mounts need to be able to absorb a lot of bending force. What you did see was that the jack mount tore off the camper structure as it was probably designed to do. Imagine that you snag the jack on a wall or some other obstacle while driving. Then this failure mode will be much easier to repair than if it tore out the complete camper frame with it.

From the first picture posted, it looks like the camper was on fairly level, but soft ground. One of the jacks under load probably started to slide away, not neccessarily the one that tore off.

I have personally watched the third leg of a three legged camper loosing footing on a patch of ice and folding under ... with much the same result. For me, the three-jack design does not inspire more confidence than the four corner jacks.

Some pieces of plywood or similar under the jack feet might have helped, or loading on an even, paved surface. Then again, they might not - I was not there.

We use the electric drill method on our camper as well, but always on a paved surface. One of the rear legs comes off the ground quite frequently in the process, and there is no flex or movement of concern. This happened on the previous campers with electric jacks as well, as the jack motors never have the exact same speed and start to run out of sync eventually.
2014 Ford F350 XLT 6.2 SCLB + 2017 Northstar Arrow

JRscooby
Explorer II
Explorer II
Maybe think about 5? Front corners, center rear, used until raised/lowered to height, then rear corners to hold?

DanLevitan
Explorer
Explorer
I have an idea of going back to the three wing mounted brackets and modifying an I-beam so I can use the corner jacks in the place of the tripod jacks that would otherwise mount to that type of bracket. I want to keep having a single foot per jack as it seems the tripod feet have to all be on the same plane to keep the jack wanting to move vertical. Also I don't like the idea of the tires contacting the tripod base when backing under the camper. I hope to mock something up during my lunch break tomorrow and will post a picture to get feedback. Going from four jacks to three seems weird but I like the idea of keeping all my jacks seated though-out the procedure and I know that is tricky with four manual jacks. I wish I could afford motorized jacks that would move in unison but that isn't in the cards.

DanLevitan
Explorer
Explorer
Yes the rear mounts only had the upper portion. I can see where I would have benefitted from having the lower mounts too. Also check out this picture of the twisted swinging bracket. Its pretty gnarly. It was the front left. The one that peeled off. The left rear then seems to have folded under and doesn't have any twist to it.

covered_wagon
Explorer
Explorer
From the torn off damage it shows the rear jack may have been too short of an attachment point ( not enough Lateral strength) . Is the corner mounting brackets only as long as the damage you can see? My jacks have an upper and a lower mounting bracket giving it more lateral strength.

JRscooby
Explorer II
Explorer II
mkirsch wrote:


Since a camper's legs are independently adjustable, the point is moot.


But when you try to lower the load, adjusting 1 jack at a time, it will always be ready to rock on 2

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
StirCrazy wrote:
BurbMan wrote:
JRscooby wrote:
Unless on level surface, 3 legs is more stable than 4.


Re-read what he said. Hence the reason cameras use tripods, milking stools have 3 legs, etc. Obviously more legs provide more support, but the more legs you have the harder it is to load them all equally. Three legs means each has to carry more weight, but they distribute that weight much easier.


there easier to level and tram with three legs but not more stable, cameras use a tri pod because it would take for ever to get level if you had 4 legs, thankfully we dont need that kinda of persision with our campers


Not necessarily level, but to get it to sit without rocking.

A 3-legged stool will sit stably on just about any surface, but a 4-legged stool will rock on two legs unless you find just the right spot.

Since a camper's legs are independently adjustable, the point is moot.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

silversand
Explorer
Explorer
Nice camper by the way! Can't wait to see pics of the final painted shell.

Without doing an on-site forensic, did the legs lower onto a thick mat of long-leaf pine needles (I've slid badly on pine needles in the past)? If the jack's landing pads were lowered onto the teflon-like slippy needles on hard packed ground, they (one landing pad) could have just slipped out (like walking on ice), and caused a cascade of instability with the other pads/legs, and the weak point, the jack attachments, just let go one at a time (even well connected)....Just a thought....

For it not to have sustained major structural shell distortion/damage falling from (near full?) jack extension, that camper must be built like a brick. Looks like a keeper to me.
Silver
2004 Chevy Silverado 2500HD 4x4 6.0L Ext/LB Tow Package 4L80E Michelin AT2s| Outfitter Caribou

StirCrazy
Moderator
Moderator
BurbMan wrote:
JRscooby wrote:
Unless on level surface, 3 legs is more stable than 4.


Re-read what he said. Hence the reason cameras use tripods, milking stools have 3 legs, etc. Obviously more legs provide more support, but the more legs you have the harder it is to load them all equally. Three legs means each has to carry more weight, but they distribute that weight much easier.


there easier to level and tram with three legs but not more stable, cameras use a tri pod because it would take for ever to get level if you had 4 legs, thankfully we dont need that kinda of persision with our campers
2014 F350 6.7 Platinum
2016 Cougar 330RBK
1991 Slumberqueen WS100

notsobigjoe
Nomad III
Nomad III
The only two things I can really see from the pics is that the front and rear jacks are at different heights which would make it off a little bit as far as wobble and strength "I would think" there is no attachment at the lower end of the rear jack. Like mine hear. The is the stabilizing factor that enables you to lean the whole camper back on the rea jacks and lift the front "In my Case" four inches higher than the rear.

EYEMLOST
Explorer
Explorer
Wow; what an ordeal! :E

I guess the rounded roof prevented more destruction?
1998 FWC Grandby
1994 Ford Bronco 5.0 XL 4X4
Sky's ORD 6" Lift / Sterling 10.25 Dually 5.13 Gear Detroit Locker / '99.5 Front F-350 Leaf Springs at Rear / HMMWVtires

DanLevitan
Explorer
Explorer
I was taking it off my truck and was lowering it on the pallets. The stack was higher at the time. Gosh, I didn't think this was too sloppy but I will be more careful if this would give you pause. Here is a different view