Jump to content

-Gramps-

Members
  • Content Count

    591
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    8

Posts posted by -Gramps-


  1. Unless you are using SAT Data, which I understand costs a small fortune, you will have to us your Verizon wireless plan, we do that all the time, no problem so far. We turn my wife's Windows 10 smartphone into a hot spot and stream Netfilx and Hulu plus anytime of the month. We have not experienced any data crunching that would stop us from streaming. 


  2. I suggested the possibility for the need to make this change back in 2011 in the forums and  and I think that idea was moved over to the blog section. I created a poll just for the fun of it back then too.  You can read it here and see the comments it got and the votes: 

    A Can Of Worms.

    This is what I said back then, some of the economic reasons  for the change have improved over the last six years, but my thoughts have not changed on the subject. 

    I have made it a point to avoid most controversial subjects here. That hasn't stopped me from posting one or two provocative things, I guess.

    This entry may cause a bit of conversation, but here goes.

    FMCA's membership is down. The magazine is so much smaller than it used to be due to a lack of advertisers. The RV industry is still living on the edge of an economic non recovery. Times are not very good at the moment. The price of gas is not going in the direction most of us would like and loans for RV purchases both towables and coaches new or used are still hard to get.

    Sometimes you have to adapt and take advantage of circumstances (and) not let them get the best of you.

    There is a lot in common with all RVs when you think about it. Lots of full timers live in towables as well as coaches. Manufacturers of both use a lot of the same suppliers including interior parts, electronics, appliances and various small supplies. We all have to dump our tanks the same way!

    I believe that there is strength in numbers. We need to combine our resources, work together to make things better for those who make RVs and those who buy them and use them. Who knows maybe the RV industry could form its own lending institution and offer loans as well as lobby Congress and state governments for things that the industry needs. Sorry, but that is still necessary, wouldn't you agree?

    So to work toward the goal of making things better for all: It is my humble opinion that the Family Motor Coach Association should become the Family RV Association. All RV owners of towables and coaches should be eligible to become members of the association.

    I wasn't there (as much as I would have liked to have been) at the Perry Convention. I hope that opening the convention to towables indicates that maybe some people are thinking the same way I am.

    Am I opening a can of worms? Who knows? Let's find out.

    Comments are certainly welcome and hoped for! So is your vote...but you need to register if you a not a member of this site.

    Derrick L

    "Gramps"

     

     


  3. One of the first things FMCA could do is promote itself, like this website and Facebook. I blogged here for years, now I post a link to my own site. It shocked me to attend an FMCA regional rally or even a national one, go to the FMCA booth to buy a shirt or hat, gather some info,  talk to other members and in the process find out the people visiting the booth didn't know that FMCA has its own website. In many cases the folks manning the booth did not know we have a website as well. Why is this?


  4. To get to the inside standoff end,  I remove the top corner decorative medallion (for lack of a better word),  and remove the ribbed insert. There are brackets behind then which hold the whole thing on to the metal frame. I unscrew those.  I don't know if you have a solid trim or some extra trim that i don't have. 


  5. The piece on the side you need to remove is about two inches wide and matches the wall not the wood. The slide out stops on it when in. It isn't really designed to be removed so what I did was after I pried it off the wall made my repair, I screwed it back on , instead of nailing it. I used screw covers, those plastic caps that you see all over a coach. I figured it wouldn't be the last time I had to remove this trim piece. 

    I discovered too that the box that houses the motor and chain drive is a bit tight. I used a saws-all and cut it open so I could get my hands in there without having to remove the whole thing. Then I modified the fabric insert to fit the larger hole I made. By the way, my living room slide out is cable driven as well as one bedroom side. Notice the piece with the screw cover, that is one that has to be removed to get to the metal cover over the cable channel.

    DSC03475.JPG


  6. Yes to the question about the crimping tool. I bought it at Lowes and the cable cutters as well. The crimp doesn't have to look good, just has to hold. If the cable you are replacing is a 

    bottom one its not as hard to get over the pulley in the overhead as others. The kit comes with a Chinese finger trap (hey that's what I call it.) and I have found that sometimes I need a small gauge wire inserted in the trap and that wire taped to the cable to pull it thru. You will need to remove the overhead trim  and the side trim so you can remove the metal cover over the cable channel that runs up the side of the slide out opening. 

    Good luck and you can call my cell if you need some assistance. I will PM you the number.

     

    Derrick

     


  7. If you intend to make the cable repair yourself  you will need a pair of  bolt cutters and a swagging/crimping tool. I carry both with me all the time and six repair kits. I have not had to use one to make a repair for a couple of years now. When you get ready to make the repair, I can be available if you need me, I have done it a bunch of times until I had the standoffs adjusted correctly, then the cable fraying stopped. 

     

    14 inch bolt cutters 

    swagging/ferrule crimping tool

    AccuSlide website with how to videos.

     

     

     

     


  8. The motor and cables are over the top of the slideout cabinets, inside the trim around the opening in the coach, not underneath the drawers. Unfortunately the picture does not show the top trim over the slideout. I have the same slide and my trim has a fabric insert which is held on with velcro, remove that and you see the motor, and the chain drive the cables are connected to.  This is only a guess but I suspect you may have to remove the medallions on each end of the top trim to gain access. A better picture with the ceiling line showing,  could help to verify that.  


  9. I checked into it. It will increase a campground wifi radio signal and bring it inside your coach. It will increase the speed at which your devices, which would be secure behind the Winegard router, talk to each other and to the campground or other public wifi that you log it on to. This would work with Xfinity public wifi, Tengo Net, which is normally pretty bad, as well as other public streaming services. What it will not do is speed up the gateway that the public wifi you are using has. In other words if a campground is paying for enough bandwidth from their provider for 25 simultaneous heavy to moderate users and you happen to sign on with what appears to be a  great connection as user number 37 the Winegard is not going to make it better for you than the other 36 people. Your connection to Facebook or whatever is still going to in a word, stink. It has been my experience that even with a great radio signal inside my coach, campgrounds just don't have enough bandwidth, the pipe is too small from Century-Link or Comcast or whoever. 


  10. Colony Tire, where we bought all our new Michelin's thru the FMCA program told us don't use anything on your tires except a good car wash. That's it. There is no safe protectant or shine product, that will not age your tires.  One of the techs went so far to say, the shinier they are the quicker they die (dry  out) Just clean them with soap and water. Also they said to cover them with a UV screen, not the wrap around type unless it is made from a breathable material. They prefer the snap on screens that cover the wheel well.  They protect your tires from UV light even on a cloudy day. Mine were custom made by Kool RV Sunshades. Considering what 22.5 tires cost, I took them at their word and followed their advice to the letter. 

    Colony Tire


  11. Update...I have used over 49.9 gig for one phone/hotspot for this billing cycle I changed to Unlimited retroactively. I am not being throttled as far as speed is concerned and still using my phone as a 4g hotspot. The second phone has used just under 0.70 gig. I also ran an internet/network bandwidth speed test. I am presently located in Vero Beach Florida, and I pinged a server in Miami,

     

    29.2

    Mbps download

    13.7

    Mbps upload

    Latency: 77 ms
    Server: Miami, FL

    Your Internet speed is fast

    Your Internet connection should be able to handle multiple devices streaming HD videos at the same time.

     

    Not quite the speed of Cox, or Comcast cable modem, but fast enough to do what I what to do on a single device at a time. 


  12. Based on the amount of pictures I have uploaded and estimating the number of hours streaming video from Amazon, I am pushing somewhere around 30gig and still on my hotspot which is using 4G. When I check my data usage with My Verizon ap, it no longer tells me how much I have used, it just says you have unlimited stream all you want. Cycle starts over in 2 days. By the way, I owned my own IT/Communications company for 25 years before I sold it and retired so I can pretty much figure out what is going on here. 


  13. I suspect that I have used a lot more than 10g in the last two weeks with my phone as a hot spot. I manage two websites with loads of large pictures and videos. I stream like crazy, both Amazon Prime and Netflix with no problem, in HD by the way, using a smart Blue Ray Player logged on on to my hotspot.  I have downloaded over thirty updates to my phone and laptops that I have been putting off for months. Data has been unlimited for me so far, but then maybe I am special.:rolleyes:


  14. In some areas Comcast/Xfinity has pay as you go public wifi, but the price is for one device only. You may get around that with a public wifi bridge/repeater. Netgear makes one that sells for about 70 bucks on Amazon.  You sign on to Xfinity with the router, then it repeats it to as many devices as you want.

    Now that Verizon is offering unlimited data per line, I purchased that for one phone which I am using as a hotspot for all my other devices including my wife's smart phone. This should work until we are parked for the summer and then I will turn my Comcast cable internet service back on and use my own modem. 


  15. Yes, I know. I blogged here at FMCA.com for seven years (133 entries starting in 2009) before I started my own site which is linked here in the blog section. Unfortunately hardly anyone goes to the blog section anymore. So I put a link here in the forums on this board.

    This board has this description:  Discuss types of Internet connections, including wireless, satellite and cellular. Tips and equipment for using high-speed Internet while traveling. Plus: E-mail, blogging, and other ways to keep in touch while RVing. 

    Blog sites, the design, the content, both words and images, take quite a bit of work if it is going to be a good site. However, like woodcarving, and film photography, I think blogging is a dying art form. People would rather tweet or text or Instagram, for that instant gratification. I am not like that. I like words, no I love words, they mean something to me. They have the power to convey emotion, inspiration and tell a good story at the same time. Combine that with a good photograph and you have something special. I think so anyway. 

    Derrick

×
×
  • Create New...