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slide won't retract

tomman58
Explorer
Explorer
Howdy,
Our new Jayco has a problem with the bed room slide it will not move either way. The motor seems to spin but will not connect to slide.

Anyone have this problem?
TIA
2015 GMC D/A, CC 4x4/ Z71 ,3.73,IBC SLT+
2018 Jayco 338RETS
2 Trek bikes
Honda EU2000i
It must be time to go, the suns out and I've got a full tank of diesel!
We have a granite fireplace hearth! Love to be a little different.
15 REPLIES 15

tomman58
Explorer
Explorer
WE were told by Jayko that the motor rarely fails but the washer you showed does all they do is redo the conic portion and all is well again. We were not so lucky as the NUT that the shaft screws into free wheeled and had to be reset.

Just be careful and don't run in or out till the "clutch" slips.
2015 GMC D/A, CC 4x4/ Z71 ,3.73,IBC SLT+
2018 Jayco 338RETS
2 Trek bikes
Honda EU2000i
It must be time to go, the suns out and I've got a full tank of diesel!
We have a granite fireplace hearth! Love to be a little different.

JBarca
Nomad II
Nomad II
tomman58 wrote:
Well here is the deal.
Jayco had 2 guys come out from a mobile mechanic place. They traveled 90 miles to get here in ft Stockton Tx.
They had to tear the entire unit out to fix a loose net that the motor spins to actuate the slide.
Jayco said you should not drive the slides till they click as it is hard on the clutch. The slide just uses a bellville washer that when the motor loads up slips and makes noise. Jayco said mark the floor or get good at stopped the slides before the clutch engages.
I've had jaycos since 1998 and this is news to me and I hope for you also.


Hi,

There are several type of slide drive systems. Do you know which brand slide drive you have?

I have a 2004 with the Lippert rack and pinion drive system. Mine has the Venture brand motor and clutch. On this unit it is suppose to trip the clutch on the way out. On the retract stroke the motor stalls, and you let your finger off.

I have asked both Venture who makes the motor drive and Lippert who make the ACME screw drive and they both stated this "vintage" is suppose to do this.

Here are some pics of the motor drive clutch


This is the clutch. The star plate is held engaged by 2 bellville springs.


The star plate


The bellville springs


Here is a progression of how the clutch trips (ratchets)

Star plate engaged in housing pockets


When the drive shaft load reaches the spring tension setting, the star plate starts to come out of the housing pockets


Now it is completely disengaged.


It was mentioned earlier to put the manual crank on and bring the slide in, Pending what type of slide drive you have, I express caution doing this unless you know 100% which direction to turn the crank.

The gear down ratio of a slide drive is immense. After a buddy of mine tore his slide actuator mounts off the camper with the hand crank, H'mm OK I need to figure this out. On this type of slide drive the manual crank turns the ACME screw directly, there is no clutch in this case. The clutch is for the motor drive. So you can put some major "uphm" into that ACME screw and tear the mounts apart.

I measured the torque required to retract my slide. The results where amazing. See here

Torque wrench on slide manual drive


And yes, you are seeing this correct. 25 in. lb. (2.08 ft lb) to is all that is needed to retract the slide.


If I start cracking with very much effort and develop 5 to 10 ft lb, still almost nothing, I can easily create 1,200# of push





Point: Make real sure you are turning the handle the right way and go slow and if nothing is moving, "stop"!

Hope you get your camper fixed up.

John
2005 Ford F350 Super Duty, 4x4; 6.8L V10 with 4.10 RA, 21,000 GCWR, 11,000 GVWR, upgraded 2 1/2" Towbeast Receiver. Hitched with a 1,700# Reese HP WD, HP Dual Cam to a 2004 Sunline Solaris T310R travel trailer.

brulaz
Explorer
Explorer
tomman58 wrote:
Well here is the deal.
Jayco had 2 guys come out from a mobile mechanic place. They traveled 90 miles to get here in ft Stockton Tx.
They had to tear the entire unit out to fix a loose net that the motor spins to actuate the slide.
Jayco said you should not drive the slides till they click as it is hard on the clutch. The slide just uses a bellville washer that when the motor loads up slips and makes noise. Jayco said mark the floor or get good at stopped the slides before the clutch engages.
I've had jaycos since 1998 and this is news to me and I hope for you also.


So basically a broken/worn out mechanical clutch?

I've heard that some slides have those, making a clicking sound when they reach their limits. My tongue jack has one too. But not any of my other motors.

Thanks for getting back to us. Sounds like all these slides should not be allowed to go to their full extent, in or out.
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow

tomman58
Explorer
Explorer
Well here is the deal.
Jayco had 2 guys come out from a mobile mechanic place. They traveled 90 miles to get here in ft Stockton Tx.
They had to tear the entire unit out to fix a loose net that the motor spins to actuate the slide.
Jayco said you should not drive the slides till they click as it is hard on the clutch. The slide just uses a bellville washer that when the motor loads up slips and makes noise. Jayco said mark the floor or get good at stopped the slides before the clutch engages.
I've had jaycos since 1998 and this is news to me and I hope for you also.
2015 GMC D/A, CC 4x4/ Z71 ,3.73,IBC SLT+
2018 Jayco 338RETS
2 Trek bikes
Honda EU2000i
It must be time to go, the suns out and I've got a full tank of diesel!
We have a granite fireplace hearth! Love to be a little different.

brulaz
Explorer
Explorer
mailman01 wrote:
Northwood did tell me that this little device, the resettable breaker/fuse, did stop the slide on the out and inward movements. If the information presented in some of the earlier posts here saying that this fuse should not be the main "stopper" of the slide movement, then where is the breaker/switch that is supposed to do this? Northwood gave me no indication of a switch being located at any other place.


Well, it was easy to check my awning. When it reaches its max extent, the motor just "stalls", there's still current running through it, until you release the button.

I figured that's what was happening with my slide and stab jack motors as well. The Lippert Stab Jack tech support agreed, saying the resettable fuse was *not* used to stop the Stab Jack motors. They would just "stall" until you released the button.

But I never found out anything about the slide motor operation. I would like to check it with my ammeter, but now hesitate to run it up against the one remaining stop to see if it "stalls" or is switched off by those auto-reset breakers. Am afraid that powerful motor will break something again!!

mailman01 wrote:

I now always try and stop the slide just prior to its' maximum movement either in or out just to prevent the fuse from having to stop it. Sounds like there should be a better "mousetrap" for this operation.


That's what I now do as well and totally agree with you.
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow

mailman01
Explorer
Explorer
Northwood did tell me that this little device, the resettable breaker/fuse, did stop the slide on the out and inward movements. If the information presented in some of the earlier posts here saying that this fuse should not be the main "stopper" of the slide movement, then where is the breaker/switch that is supposed to do this? Northwood gave me no indication of a switch being located at any other place.

I now always try and stop the slide just prior to its' maximum movement either in or out just to prevent the fuse from having to stop it. Sounds like there should be a better "mousetrap" for this operation.
Marty & Roz
'10 F-250 PSD
08' Arctic Fox 27 T
20 years USAF---23 years USPS Now looking for 40+ years retirement. God Willing....

brulaz
Explorer
Explorer
mailman01 wrote:
I had a similar issue when the slide failed to stop when extending outward and busted a little of the trim before my wife could release the button...don't know how far out it would have gone. But, after checking with Northwood, we decided the culprit was something called a "resettable fuse" that was not sensing the added voltage draw at the end of the slide extension and allowing the slide to continue to be pushed out.

I located this little fuse in a box beneath the bed, found another replacement, and now all works well. But each time the slide is either sent out or withdrawn I am VERY alert to watching for the "end of travel" positions and making certain it stops at the proper position.

This small "resettable fuse/breaker" can, and will, cause a fellow a lot of anxiety if it fails. It is located at different locations depending on the unit.


Arrrrrgh.

A whole bunch of people have convinced me that these "auto reset circuit breakers" are *not* used to control the slide motor, or should not be anyway.

http://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/28054680.cfm

But Northwood and Outdoors RV are closely related so ....

Guess I'll have to crawl under the trailer with my clamp-on ammeter and double check whether the motor stalls when it hits a stop, or the auto-reset circuit breaker cuts power to the motor.
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow

mailman01
Explorer
Explorer
I had a similar issue when the slide failed to stop when extending outward and busted a little of the trim before my wife could release the button...don't know how far out it would have gone. But, after checking with Northwood, we decided the culprit was something called a "resettable fuse" that was not sensing the added voltage draw at the end of the slide extension and allowing the slide to continue to be pushed out.

I located this little fuse in a box beneath the bed, found another replacement, and now all works well. But each time the slide is either sent out or withdrawn I am VERY alert to watching for the "end of travel" positions and making certain it stops at the proper position.

This small "resettable fuse/breaker" can, and will, cause a fellow a lot of anxiety if it fails. It is located at different locations depending on the unit.
Marty & Roz
'10 F-250 PSD
08' Arctic Fox 27 T
20 years USAF---23 years USPS Now looking for 40+ years retirement. God Willing....

brulaz
Explorer
Explorer
Been wondering what makes for repeated shear pin breakage.

In our case, don't see any unusual binding in how the slide works. But the motor is very powerful and obviously doing a lot of work.

First thought we were doing too much stop-start, as we never had a slide before and were very cautious opening and closing it.

But now I think it's when the slide's welded-on stops hit the frame. The motor is so dam powerful, last time it not only popped the shear bolt (3rd one, grade 5), it busted off the welded-on stop (just a spot weld).

Now I'm extra careful. Just allowing the rubber gaskets around the slide opening to squeeze slightly before releasing the button. That leaves the remaining stop about 1/2" from the frame. The busted-off stop I'll just leave off and be careful;).
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow

ttsr4us
Explorer
Explorer
Once you get the side in, get the dealer to check out the whole thing.

I had this happen once to a trailer where the slide was misaligned and the other time to my motor home where the floor of the slide out had warped due to water damage. In both cases, the shear pin failed repeatedly.
Brian and Esta

previously 2 Trailers and 2 Motorhomes, back in the trailer game.

GMC Sierra 3500HD 2WD, SLT Crew Short Bed. Duramax. 2014

Airstream 2016 Flying Cloud 30 RB with 2 a/c + Window Awnings

chevyman2
Explorer
Explorer
It is almost always the gears or pins that break on slideouts. The motor seldom quits. You might be able to replace the broken part fairly easy, you might not.

One definite way of retracting is : --- : have someone inside pushing the button to retract (in case a tooth catches somewhere), and get a few guys outside and push push push. Then strap it shut with a ratchet strap and call the dealer for an appointment
Tim-DW(Kathy)
12 Chevy Sonic DD, 03 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE, 2001 Jayco KIWI
If a "nightmare" is considered a dream-then I am living the dream

tomman58
Explorer
Explorer
Motor runs the shaft runs but must have a connection between the gear box and the slide,
2015 GMC D/A, CC 4x4/ Z71 ,3.73,IBC SLT+
2018 Jayco 338RETS
2 Trek bikes
Honda EU2000i
It must be time to go, the suns out and I've got a full tank of diesel!
We have a granite fireplace hearth! Love to be a little different.

K_Charles
Explorer
Explorer
Replace the broken sheer bolt maybe.

powderman426
Explorer
Explorer
Not familiar with Jayvo slides, but it sounds like you sheared a pin. If so you need to turn the motor till the motor shaft and shaft are aligned then drive out Lord pin and replace. The next thing would be to look for a reason for it to break.
Ron & Charlotte
WD8CBT since 1976
32' Gulfstream Ameri-Camp & 05 Ram QC LB

I started with nothing and I still have most of it left

I never fail, I just succeed in finding out what doesn't work