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I was forced to use this pad in Tennessee which has a "slight" incline after I declined the other "slight" incline site I'd booked. No way I was trying the booked one. Hey it's Tennessee.
No way I'd have tried the second one without our hosspads. They helped by allowing jack feet to dig into the rubber more on the uphill side and lock them down. It didn't cut into them but I'm sure would if tilted enough.
I have the same situaton at home with uphill slope but since I have a gravel drive i can dig out a layer of gravel for hosspads to lie horizontal, so no problem as long as front of camper is kept higher than the rear. I wish driveway was flat! What we need are ball & socket joints against the ground!
As long as it's all the same slope for the length you need for the whole process not that big of deal to loud/unload for our Wolf Creek. My drive drops about 20" in 30 feet I have.