Airstream Chat Room Airstream Links Campground & Product Reviews Airstream Classifieds Airstream Articles Blogs Photo Gallery Forum Listings Portal - Home Page

Go Back   Airstream Forums > Airstream Restoration, Repair & Parts Forums > General Repair Forum



Check out our new sister site AirstreamCentral.com. To contribute an article click here.


Quick Links
- Forum Listings
- Register - it's FREE!
- View Member's Map
- Airstream Articles
- "Live" Chat Room
- View Classifieds
- Post a Classified
- Airstream @ eBay
- Upcoming Rallies
   - Add A Rally
- Rally Discussions
- Repair Discussions
- Search Forums
- Member List
- AIR # Directory
- Member Search
- Profile Photos
- Airstream Photo
- Airstream Links
- Fun & Games
- WBCCI Websites
- WBCCI Unit Forums
- Courtesy Parking
- Campgrounds
- Support & FAQs
- Community Policies
- Helpers Needed




Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-09-2004, 12:38 PM   #1
Chuck
Moderator

Chuck's Avatar
Profile:  1973 23' Safari
North of Boston , Massachusetts
Posts: 3,155
Images: 99

A couple of things that worked

just wanted to report a couple of things I did last week to get my camper ready last week.

Since I descovered some serious floor damage from a leak that "may" still exist, I decided to do some more sealing. got some Vulkem, and this time, I borrowed my dad's heat gun for removing the old stuff. (when I did my roof vents, shortly after buying the trailer, I spent hours and hours scraping, picking, rubbing, soaking with all kinds of solvents, up to and including straight xylene...nothing worked well at removing the old crud. It was an awful job!). This heat gun isn't the typical "paint removal" thing that is the size of a blow-dryer; it was meant for de-soldering printed circuits, applying heat-shrink tubing, and the like. has a very small nozzle...probably dime-sized...just about the size of a bead of Vulkem over the windows. Anyway, I gave it a try, and let me tell ya, that old sealant, whatever it was, came right off. It may have taken me all of 10 minutes to completely strip the rear window's sealant. (that's the big window!). only minor, gentle scraping of a few scraps was needed. used a metal putty knife, as I would have assumed anything plastic would have melted. but it didn't require any hard pressure, and any potential scratches would have been covered by new sealant, anyway, so I wasn't too worried about it. as it turned out, I dont' think I scratched anything, anyway.

there was talk a while back about the noise from the reese dual-cam hitch. I had plenty of that...the groaning and creeking really sounds very "painful". I tried the "petroleum jelly" suggestion...and this is also on Reese's site...and son of a gun if it don't work! The idea didn't sound to me like it would do anything...I mean, "vaseline????" well, it really did seem to tone it down, not just a little, but the creeking is almost gone.
Reese says that the petroleum jelly isn't a good enough lubricant to interfere w/ the sway control action, as regular grease would. but I could almost sort of detect a teensy bit of tail-wagging back there on my recent trip. just a little. nothing to be concerned about. But I don't remember feeling that sensation before. Then again, there were a couple of other adjustments made for this trip. I pumped my rear tires all the way up to their max of 65lbs...which I hadn't done before. But everything I read here says that should dampen sway, not increase it. I also made a small adjustment to the tilt angle on my ball mount. I think it was too far back before, and the spring bars were too tight. (they had a bow in them, and it really took some effort to snap up the snap-up brackets). I only moved the adjustment nut up "1 tooth". still using the same number of links, and it still takes 2 hands and an "ooomph!" on the snap-up to hook up..just not as much. it was just enough of an adjustment to take the bow out of the spring bars. I didn't take any measurements, as I didn't have any flat ground handy, but at a couple of stops that seemed pretty flat, everything looked good. I'm starting to think that the front end shouldn't really drop much w/ 200 or so lbs on the axle...but I had it set before so that it did. but if I stand on the front bumper, nothing moves. If I stand on the rear bumper...it moves down quite a bit. So it comes back to (again) the only real way to know exactly what's going on is to take it to a scale.

but ANYway...I think my point was that the vaseline really did quiet the hitch down.
__________________
Air:291
Wbcci: 3752
'73 Safari 23'
'00 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 QC
Chuck is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 06-09-2004, 01:12 PM   #2
87MH
Rivet Master

87MH's Avatar
Profile:  1978 31' Sovereign
Katy (West Planet Houston) , Texas
Posts: 1,682
Images: 143

Quote:
Originally Posted by chuck
just wanted to report a couple of things I did last week to get my camper ready last week.

..... So it comes back to (again) the only real way to know exactly what's going on is to take it to a scale.

Chuck:

You hit the nail on the head there!!!

I don't know how the scale situation is where you are, but here in the Houston area Cat scales are popping up all over the place.

Every weighmistress I have dealt with has been extremely helpful - they don't seem to mind RV weighs at all.

Weighs are 10 bucks, with reweighs only $1 each.

There are usually 3 weigh pads available per scale, and with someone spotting you you could probably get each axel weighed (utilizing the front two pads for the Tow Vehicle (with trailer and WD hooked up) with the trailer axels on the rear pad, -- then, on the second weigh, get the individual car axels without the trailer (drop the trailer on the long (rear) pad for a total trailer weight) the same time you are using the front two weigh pads for Tow Vehicle weight (each axel without the trailer and WD hooked up) -- then, when pulling out, get one more weigh of the trailer axels with one set of tires off to the side (for side to side loading of the trailer).

All for about twelve dollars!
__________________
Dennis

"Suck it up, spend the bucks, do it right the first time."

WBCCI # 1113

AirForums #1737
87MH is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
A Few Favorite Things j54mark General Repair Forum 0 04-13-2004 02:21 PM
Shower curtain hangie things Jay Johnson General Interior Topics 3 08-12-2003 08:26 PM
television - looking for great airstream couple sunny181957 Airstream Motorhome Forums 0 08-07-2003 10:27 AM
the great things about air streams overlander Our Community 36 11-15-2002 11:30 AM
Stange things about my trailer or "Stock or Not" airstreamcaravel Our Community 5 06-12-2002 05:39 PM

Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.0.1

All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:25 AM.

Other Social Knowledge forum communities:
Cooking Forum - Sailing Forum - Early Retirement - Airstream Trailer - Aquarium Forum - Royal Forum - Book Forum - Volkswagen Touareg Forum - Jeep Wrangler Forum - Whitewater Kayaking & Rafting Forum - Fiberglass RV Forum - RV Forum - Truck Conversion - U2 Music Forum
Social Knowledge Networks
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0

Airstream is a registered trademark of Airstream Inc. All rights reserved. Airstream trademark used under license to Social Knowledge LLC.

eXTReMe Tracker

Other recommended Airstream sites:
Airstream Forums - Airstream Classifieds - Airstream Articles
Airstream Central - Airstream Photos