Oct-17-2017 09:12 PM
Oct-18-2017 06:36 PM
Oct-18-2017 07:49 AM
Oct-18-2017 07:17 AM
Oct-18-2017 07:09 AM
Oct-18-2017 06:54 AM
Oct-18-2017 06:47 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:Ron Schulz wrote:
Here's a posting of a different sort. I have electric stabilizers on my 2015 TT. They suddenly, at the same time, started screaming when I extended them. Naturally I immediately thought about lubrication. When I checked the owners manual it stated that no lubrication was needed, that just washing the parts would be OK. Really? So that's what I did. Didn't make sense washing a drive screw and it didn't make any difference anyhow.
I texted Lippert to get some advice on how to handle the situation and they replied asking me for the TT vin and to send pix of the stabilizers which I did. A few days later I got an email stating they were going to replace the stabilizers at no charge for parts or shipping. HUH?
Sure enough. Last week two big boxes arrived. I could barely move them. These suckers are heavy. Replacing the old ones wasn't too bad, even for an old person. Total of eight screws per unit and it was done. Took about four hours total. New ones are whisper quiet. Also, the drive screws on the new ones are coated with a heavy duty grease.
My thanks to Lippert. Sometimes good things do happen...
Yes sometimes they do but I would fully expect the new ones to eventually fail after the same amount of use which is an LCI M.O.
Good Luck.
I have had them send me replacements for failed parts also. They typically jump at the chance to do so if they can get out of labor costs.
Replacing an under engineered and cheap part with another cheaply made part is hardly a solution.
The LCI stuff is used by the RV Industry because it's cheap.....all of it....not because it's the greatest. And in a lot of cases now days with lots of stuff, Lippert is the only game in town due to their Industry acquisitions.
I am a Lippert basher and will be until the day I die. Unfortunately finding something without something LCI in it is like hitting the Powerball. I knew what I was getting in our Rockwood with its LCI frame. A few hours with steel and welder fixed that. At least it had Dexter axles and not Lippert, I tossed the Furrion TV (Lippert partner) after it failed in the first year of use, did not even request a warranty replacement. I am almost Lippert free after fabricating my own operators for the LCI frameless windows. All that is left is swapping the chincy LCI stabilizer jacks made from metal as thin as in a Coors light can with some BAL's.
Oct-18-2017 05:29 AM
Oct-18-2017 05:02 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
The LCI stuff is used by the RV Industry because it's cheap.....all of it....
Oct-18-2017 03:07 AM
Ron Schulz wrote:
Here's a posting of a different sort. I have electric stabilizers on my 2015 TT. They suddenly, at the same time, started screaming when I extended them. Naturally I immediately thought about lubrication. When I checked the owners manual it stated that no lubrication was needed, that just washing the parts would be OK. Really? So that's what I did. Didn't make sense washing a drive screw and it didn't make any difference anyhow.
I texted Lippert to get some advice on how to handle the situation and they replied asking me for the TT vin and to send pix of the stabilizers which I did. A few days later I got an email stating they were going to replace the stabilizers at no charge for parts or shipping. HUH?
Sure enough. Last week two big boxes arrived. I could barely move them. These suckers are heavy. Replacing the old ones wasn't too bad, even for an old person. Total of eight screws per unit and it was done. Took about four hours total. New ones are whisper quiet. Also, the drive screws on the new ones are coated with a heavy duty grease.
My thanks to Lippert. Sometimes good things do happen...
Oct-18-2017 02:27 AM
Oct-18-2017 02:21 AM