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five

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    1997
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Posts posted by five


  1. My last roof water leak was one or more of the five marker lights on the top front of the coach.  The leaks, if more than one, were not the gaskets between the lights and the roof, but the gaskets between the amber lenses and the bodies of the lights.  So I resealed all five from the outside, I did not replace the internal gaskets.


  2. On 5/10/2018 at 10:29 AM, jleamont said:

    Five, unit was $1125 to my door, extension pipe for the exhaust, clamps, hangers, PEX tubing and elbows, propane hose, (20 gallon LPG grill tank already had extras), TWO propane tank holders DOT approved with strapping, (I carry an extra 20 gallons of propane) stainless exhaust outlet. Total out of pocket $1240.00

    The project took me about 4 hours from start to finish. The hardest part was drilling the air inlet and exhaust holes in the floor, trying to miss the cross beams on a Semi Monocoque chassis was a bit challenging and utilizing the space so our junk would fit back in

     

    Thanks, that's much cheaper than an AH system.


  3. I opted for the more portable unit, a Blue Ox Patriot II.  To set it up for travel, set it on the floor in front of the driver's seat, adjust the driver's seat so it is just touching the back of the Patriot, attach the Patriot's control rod foot to the brake pedal, plug in the 12 volt and push the "set up" button.  When the "set up" button is pushed, the control rod will push the brake pedal all the way in, then come all the way back out.  Done.  There is a wireless controller in the coach that lets you adjust braking action from the cockpit.


  4. 7 hours ago, ctammyh@hotmail.com said:

    .... Tiffin has opened an additional production line: currently selling 72 units a week and producing 65....

     

    They are doing well, selling more than they make.  No way they are selling 72 units a month, much less a week....if they are selling them, it's pie in the sky, 'cause they can't be making that many.


  5. When I got there we had half Super Cs and called the others C minuses.  The Super Cs had the L11 engines that kept exploding...we lost one also, when the engine exploded into the aft pylon.  After that, they pulled the L11s and made them all standard C models.


  6. 14 hours ago, manholt said:

    FIVE.  Your really in a S & B home?  I thought you was full time Hobo!  Riding the rubber wheels, not the steel rails!

    Not FT, but getting ready to head out again.  We usually spend three to four months on the road.  Couple of days ago I had a guy (who knows nothing about RVs or camping) ask me when I was going "camping" again.  I told him I was getting ready, have to wash the tent and clean the Coleman stove.:P


  7. On 4/8/2018 at 11:24 AM, huffypuff said:

    Chi Lia and Marble Mountain Vietnam U.S. Army  1971 - 1972.  Served with 178th ASHC ( assault support helicopter company ) MOS 67U20 CH47 helicopter repairman.  

    178th were the Box Cars if my ancient memory is correct.  After a ground tour with the 25th ID, I went to flight school, Chinook transition and back to VN, where I spent a year with the 213th ASHC (Black Cats) in Phu Loi, Sep 70 to Sep 71.  We had 16 CH 47C models....and one little OH 58.


  8. I may be wrong, but it seems to me the FMCA mag, Jan issue I think, has a list of members who are willing to help other members who need it.  They provide overnight stays, the capability to drive a member's coach home, and something else I can't recall...I don't have that issue at home, it's in the MH.


  9. 22 hours ago, wayne77590 said:

    Ernie, did that, done that in VN and you didn't miss a thing.

    I'm one of the lucky ones. I kept my head and A** down and came out without the PH. Happy for that.

    Thank you for your service.

    Like you, I kept my head and A** down, but still came out with a PH.  My first tour was in the artillery, but my helicopter tour made it hard to keep my head down.  But as luck would have it, I still got the PH during my first tour.:D


  10. 8 minutes ago, jleamont said:

    ....I have little faith most could effectively change a tire from the beginning to end of that process without putting us at risk afterwards or cutting corners as they get paid by the job plus mileage and the faster it gets done the more money they make. This practice often creates the most problems...

     

     

    Along the same lines, when we had our RF blowout a couple of years ago, we called GS road service.  The guy they sent had very little room in which to work, the shoulder was very narrow with the RF wheel right on the edge of a 45 degree embankment.  He jacked up the coach and changed the tire without ever removing the rim.  He was very fast and good...and said, "please don't tell anybody I did not remove the rim."

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