Apr-21-2015 07:48 PM
Apr-25-2015 03:26 PM
hawkeye-08 wrote:
We had a wind incident when we had our previous TV/TT. We were towing into 50mph headwind (mostly, angled some at times). We were going about 35mph when we went under an overpass (4 lane divided highway, we were in right hand lane, very light traffic) and without moving the steering wheel, the whole setup moved to the left lane, it happened fast and all together, no sway, just one moment in right, next moment in left lane. We found out later that some of the roads not far from there were closed. We should have not traveled that night, but wanted to get home.
I would find a place to pull off if the winds were too high or stay put if forecast called for high winds.
Apr-25-2015 09:00 AM
Apr-24-2015 07:42 PM
azdryheat wrote:
Winds don't affect our toy hauler much at all. 35-40mph cross-winds and we're stable. 5th wheel towing is the only way to go.
Apr-23-2015 08:24 PM
Apr-23-2015 07:41 PM
They (the Casita factory) suggested a propane station in Ennis to fill our tanks and recommended the BBQ restaurant next to it for lunch. By the time we found the station, it was closed for lunch, and the cold front had caught up with us. It was 12:15 and the sign said that the shop would open at 1:00. We went next door to Bubba’s BBQ and got take-out and had lunch in the Casita.
We watched the clouds get lower and darker and the rain get heavier. At 12:45 an LPG delivery truck pulled into the station and a little old guy got out and limped over to us, knocked, and asked if we needed propane. He said that someone had called him and told him we were waiting. He wanted to get us fueled before the electrical fireworks started. In the half our or so that we had been there, the temperature dropped 30 degrees.
I called my sister and had her pull up a live Doppler radar website and give me a briefing on where the heaviest thunderstorm cells were. We drove through Ennis and headed back to her house on 287. The rain at times was so heavy it was hard to see and the winds were reported as 30 mph gusting to 45 in the Waxahachie area.
The little Casita behaved beautifully and I caught myself driving 60+ several times even though I was trying to drive conservatively. We did hydroplane several times and the wind blew the Pathfinder and Casita sideways across the highway as one unit.
By the time we got to Midlothian, the rain and wind was so heavy and the creeks were flooding over the highway so I decided it was time to hunker down for a while.
I called my sister and she told me that we were in the worst of it at the moment and that we had a shot at beating the next heavy cell if we left as soon as possible.
The rain let up a little and we hit the road again. We heard on the radio that DFW airport had been shut down due to tornadoes spotted nearby. I told my California-native wife to keep her eyes out for cyclonic action and pressed on. I’d spent most of my early life in Texas and Oklahoma and had yet to see a tornado but always wanted to…now was not the time for that. We’d paid for a whole egg, not an omelet.
As we hit the outskirts of Ft. Worth, the worst was behind us and the death toll was five or six. It rose into the teens the next day.
Apr-23-2015 07:03 PM
colliehauler wrote:SprinklerMan wrote:Totally unnecessary if it's just wind. If it's a bad storm park in the rest area and go in the shelter building.dvitale300 wrote:
So here's a question - Let's say you're on the highway and the cross winds get too strong - perhaps a storm is blowing in. You find a rest area / safe place to pull over and wait it out. You try to point the trailer into the wind (although that isn't always possible). Do you put down the stabilizers as well - or just stay on the wheels?
I would unhook from the trailer . If it goes , so what thats what insurance is for .
Apr-23-2015 09:26 AM
Apr-23-2015 08:39 AM
Apr-23-2015 07:18 AM
Doug33 wrote:
Did you ever know that you're my hero,
and everything I would like to be?
I can fly higher than an eagle,
'cause you are the wind beneath my RV.
Apr-23-2015 05:19 AM
Apr-22-2015 06:34 PM
SprinklerMan wrote:Totally unnecessary if it's just wind. If it's a bad storm park in the rest area and go in the shelter building.dvitale300 wrote:
So here's a question - Let's say you're on the highway and the cross winds get too strong - perhaps a storm is blowing in. You find a rest area / safe place to pull over and wait it out. You try to point the trailer into the wind (although that isn't always possible). Do you put down the stabilizers as well - or just stay on the wheels?
I would unhook from the trailer . If it goes , so what thats what insurance is for .
Apr-22-2015 05:11 PM
dvitale300 wrote:
So here's a question - Let's say you're on the highway and the cross winds get too strong - perhaps a storm is blowing in. You find a rest area / safe place to pull over and wait it out. You try to point the trailer into the wind (although that isn't always possible). Do you put down the stabilizers as well - or just stay on the wheels?
Apr-22-2015 04:52 PM
dvitale300 wrote:
So here's a question - Let's say you're on the highway and the cross winds get too strong - perhaps a storm is blowing in. You find a rest area / safe place to pull over and wait it out. You try to point the trailer into the wind (although that isn't always possible). Do you put down the stabilizers as well - or just stay on the wheels?
Apr-22-2015 03:04 PM