All ActivityMost RecentMost LikesSolutionsRe: What did you do to your Class A MH today??? VinCee wrote: Mike it does look beautiful though! Very nice. Thank you. I appreciate that. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today??? Kidoo wrote: Zmotorsports, great idea, thanks for sharing, I was wondering how to fix this poor door set up. Mine has damaged the door seal and it does not hold the door properly. Now I will be able to replace the seal. Thanks, I wish I could take the credit for it but I can't. I saw it elsewhere and just copied it. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today??? JimM68 wrote: Mike, I have one of those also. Care to share the specifics of the cylinder you used? I bought the parts from Amazon. The part numbers are as follows: RV Designer G22 20" gas strut with 20 pound charge. RV Designer G825 3/4" gas strut brackets. (2 per package/1 pck req.) Hope that helps. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today???One more small item I wanted to complete over the weekend on our motorcoach before the start of the new RVing season. I decided to finally replace that poorly designed door mechanism that Monaco uses. I don't know why they didn't get with the times like most every other manufacturer but they insisted on sticking with a poor out of date scissor type mechanism to hold the door open as well as act as a stop. There have been a lot of write-ups over the years and I finally decided last fall that I had tightened up the scissor assembly for the last time and ordered the parts to convert it to the gas strut style. Here is the only part where I really had to deviate from some of the other write-ups, my Dynasty had the small molded drip rail over the entrance door so it needed a small amount of trimming to clear the swing of the gas strut. I then started measuring where I wanted to the bracket to mount on the coach. I ended up 4" back from the front of the door molding to the center of the first hole in the bracket. I also drilled a third hole in both brackets to give a little extra support. I then opened the door to 90-degrees and marked where the bracket needed to be on the door itself. Then drilled and installed it. This is what it looks like with the door closed. Next I wanted to machine a couple of covers to cover the openings of the two OEM mounting brackets. I used a pieced of .125" aluminum, measured, machined, drilled and countersunk the screw holes for the coach mounted piece. I then used a piece of .188" thick aluminum that I flycut to flatten out, measured the bolt holes, drilled and countersunk for the rivets using a .375" end mill. I made the part slightly oversize to completely cover the square recessed hole in the door itself. The part measures 1.5" x 3.0" overall dimensions. I then flipped it over in the mill vise and machined the border to the exact size of the OEM bracket. This will allow the cover to orientate itself down into the recess of the door. Cover installed on the coach inside the doorjamb. Cover installed up on top of the door into the recess of the OEM bracket. Sadly this cover will never be seen up on top of the door. But I will know it is there and what it looks like. All in all the complete job was quite easy and I highly recommend it to anyone who owns a Monaco coach with the scissor style door support mechanism. Also not shown in the above pictures is after I completed the installation I touched up the heads of the six screws with some black paint to blend into the mounting brackets. It actually looks like something that should have come out of the factory this way. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today???My steer tires showed up yesterday so I was able to get them installed and torqued onto the coach. I then took her for about a 15-mile test drive. Nice!!! Have an appointment this afternoon to have the alignment double checked after making the alterations. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today???I have been needing to put new tires on our 2003 Monaco Dynasty. I have NOT been happy with the POS Goodyear G670 that were on the coach one bit. They have developed an irregular wear pattern and I thought I would have an alignment done prior to installing my new Michelin's. The alignment was within spec but to the high side of the allowable thrust angle of the drive axle. Monaco Roadmaster rear suspensions are not adjustable, as many other heavy RV chassis are either. The guy who performed my laser alignment told me he wouldn't do anything with it as it was within the allowable range. That isn't me. Between he and I we calculated that the driver's side drive axle needed to move forward just under .125" and the tag axle slightly less than that. On many heavy OTR trucks they use adjustable ends on their suspension links and Volvo uses an ecentric that allows for some slight adjustment. I thought about drilling the holes out and machining some ecentrics but wasn't sure if I wanted to lose any material on the chassis mounting points as well as several of them would be difficult to get a drill in due to space limitations. Again, the gentleman who did the alignment suggested leaving it if there were no adverse handling issues. My wife and I like to travel mainly on two lane country roads when we travel and I notice that due to road crown the coach does drift off slightly when letting go of the steering wheel. On concrete interstates it is fine. I opted to move the driver's side forward .125" so it will actually help to hold to the road crown a bit. First off, the reason for all this. Baby gets new shoes. Michelin XZA2 Energy tires in a 295/80R22.5 size. I am replacing all four drive tires, taking the two best tires from the drive axle and moving them to the tag axle and I will also be putting two new steer tires on. Good thing I am done paying for my son's college because there went a years tuition.:eyecrazy: Here are the two trailing arms (control arms) that I will be removing to lengthen. Upper and lower on driver's side. Don't worry, all the weight of the coach is NOT sitting on those two jackstands under the hub. I have my 20-ton jackstands under the rear of the frame and those two 6-ton jackstands are merely holding the weight of the drive axle because I dumped the air out of the rear suspension to allow some movement of the axle. Make-shift jig setup on my welding table. I clamped some large tubing down so I could make two borders to hold the trailing arm, take some measurements, cut and then insert the trailing arm back into the jig and clamp it to the correct length. Cutting the trailing arm in my horizontal bandsaw. I had measured the outside diameter of the square tubing of the trailing arms and had prepared for two separate methods of sleeving the trailing arm. I dug through my steel supply and found a piece of trailer hitch receiver tubing left over from one of the various trailer hitch projects. This measures 2" inside diameter and would work to sleeve the outside of the trailing arm. I was really hoping that the 2" square tubing that Roadmaster used for the trailing arms was .250" wall thickness because I also had a few small pieces of 1.5" O.D. x .250" wall square tube in my scrap bin. This would be my preferred method which would allow me to sleeve the trailing arm internally keeping the outside dimension the same as OEM. Not that sleeving it externally would be any weaker or stronger, just that I wanted to keep the trailing arm as near OEM appearance without sacrificing strength as possible. All the planets were in alignment, the wall thickness of the trailing arm was .250" so I was able to use 1.5" square tubing to sleeve internally.:rocker: I then went one step further and put the trailing arm back into the horizontal bandsaw and removed a .125" sliver of steel. This will allow me to have just enought of a gap in the joint to allow full penetration and let the weld bite hard into the inner sleeve as well as both halves of the trailing arm for a very solid link. In addition, I knew there would be some shrinkage or pull back putting that much heat and weld into the trailing arm. I actually set the overall length @ .156" thinking it would pull back approx. 1/32" upon cooling. I also drilled a few .500" holes in both halves of the trailing arm to allow me to rosette weld (plug weld) the inner sleeve to the trailing arm. Root weld and rosette welds completed. For some reason I don't have any pictures of the internal sleeve but there is a 6" length of 1.5" square tubing inside the trailing arm. While I was waiting for the root weld to cool slightly I decided to grab some polish and run a coat of polish around my wheels. When my wife and I bought the coach in 2007 the previous owner had neglected the wheels badly. I don't think they had seen a coat of polish in their first four years. Upon our purchasing the coach, I removed all the wheels and polished them with a compounding pad using tripoli and jewelers rouge bringing them back to nearly new shine. Now once or twice a year I merely have to run around them with a coat of Busch's Aluminum polish and they look amazing and bead water off nicely. I then moved on to complete to top pass on the trailing arm. After cooling I threw it back into the jig to test for the final measurement. Dead nuts on @ 1/8" over the starting length. It shrunk back exactly where it needed to be.:rocker: After cooling I applied a heavy coat of chassis paint, installed the lower trailing arm, removed the upper trailing arm and performed the exact same procedure. Here is the upper trailing arm completed and ready for paint. Here is the upper trailing arm completed, painted and installed. Here is the lower trailing arm completed, painted and installed. Inner dual installed, Balance Master installed, Crossfire installed and torqueing the wheels on with my Proto 3/4" drive torque wrench. Yes that is snow that is starting to fall that you see on the ground. It started just as I crawled out from under the coach from tightening the last two bolts on the tag axle trailing arms. View of completed project. You can see how much better it looks after all that work.:lol: All in all, I am glad that job is done. Now to do another alignment just to confirm the modification. Mike.Re: Follow up on new paint jobNice job. I thought it looked like the one on their website. We have some friends that just got their 99 Country Coach Magna painted there over the summer and it turned out awesome. They did a great job. Mike.Re: Time to bite the bullet on batteriesI too have had good results with Interstate U2200's here. I installed new ones in Feb. 2007 when we purchased our Dynasty and they are still meeting my needs. Hopefully I can get another year or two out of them but they have been great batteries. I had Trojan T105's in my previous coach and they were 7 years old when I sold the coach so I have no complaints there either. Mike.Re: Cold weather refrigerator questionWe have never run into this issue although I do block off my top vent just because heat rises. I fabbed a little shield that I put in the top of the refrigerator compartment but that is all. We have used all of our motorhomes for snowmobiling up until about two years ago when we sold our sleds and got out of the sport. The coldest we have been in are temps just dipping into the single digits at night with highs in the upper teens/low 20's during the day and NEVER had an issue in 20+ years now. Personally, I wouldn't worry much about it unless you have an issue and then deal with it then. Mike.Re: What did you do to your Class A MH today???Had a new windshield installed yesterday. The first of the week I had to paint and install three new air conditioning shrouds as we lost one last week heading to Moab in a horrific wind storm. Mike.