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Everything posted by wolfe10
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Full, and I would add a Biocide since the fuel will be stored over 3 months. http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/store...9&langId=-1 And I know Michelin recommends in writing to inflate the tires to the max PSI shown on the sidewall while in storage. Be sure to re-set to correct PSI when you "de-winterize". Brett
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Short answer: It is not good for the engine. Long answer: Moisture in the crankcase is one of the major problems for stored engines. Moisture is one of the natural byproducts of combustion, particularly in a cold engine. If you can not run the engine UNDER LOAD/at highway speeds long enough to get the OIL, not just coolant up to operating temperature, you are adding moisture to the the crankcase. Will your slides and jacks work with just the ignition turned on, but engine off? I would sure recommend that if it would work. Brett
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99 Monaco Windsor Entertainment Center Help Needed
wolfe10 replied to clintonmotor's topic in Electronics
As Don asked, what is the issue? If your TV is "pre-digital", you will need either a converter box or a new TV. If another issue, let us know what it is. Brett -
Who Is Credible Concerning Tire Pressures ?
wolfe10 replied to LivingLikeEachDayIsMyLast's topic in Tires
If someone tells you categorically what tire pressure you should carry without knowing your wheel position/axle weights, in my opinion you have met either a clairvoyant (he can "divine" your coach's weights and weight distribution by looking at it) or an idiot (as he does not understand that PSI is WEIGHT DEPENDENT). While you will hear and read a variety of answers/opinions, the best source of information on your tires is your tire manufacturer. They did not go to the trouble to develop and publish inflation tables (load/PSI tables) if the correct answer is "one PSI fits all". Please go to this Inflation Table on Goodyear's website: http://www.goodyear.com/rv/pdf/rv_inflation.pdf On page 2 you will find your tires. The table gives the MINIMUM tire pressure for a given weight. Most recommend adding 5 PSI safety cushion to this minimum if you entered the table with the heavier wheel position weight on each axle. Add 10 PSI to the minimum if all you have is axle weights to account for some left/right weight imbalance. Do not exceed the pressure molded into the tire side wall or wheel maximum. Brett Wolfe -
John, Is the water heater on propane or electric? Propane gives a LOT more BTU's of heating. Is the water heater still on/running when the hot water turns cold? Are all showers and faucets turned off at the faucet, not just the head-- check particularly if you have a wet bay shower head? Brett
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First question: What CONTROLLER is your solar panel connected through? A controller functions the same as a voltage regulator does on an alternator. The controller, not the solar panel should determine the charging rate (just as a regulator controls charge rate for an alternator). And, with multiple charging sources functioning at the same time, the one set to the highest voltage/charge rate determines the maximum voltage/charge rate. Second question: On a clear day (solar panels charging max rate, what is the voltage at the batteries? Brett
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Welcome to the FMCA Forum. Start by checking sway bar bushings, both center bushings and end links. Brett
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What chassis? I would start by making sure the chassis is set up properly: 1. Weigh the individual wheel positions (best) or axles and set tire pressure per your tire manufacturer's recommendations for your actual weights. 2. Check ride height. 3. If problem persists, next would be to check front end alignment, particularly caster. Set it to the high side of factory spec for better tracking. Brett
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Raise the front wheels off the ground and check RUN-OUT. Ford had a series of wheels that had sufficient "slop" to allowed the wheels to be mounted such they had excessive run-out. Any good tire dealer has a run-out gauge, and it only takes about 2 minutes per tire. Ford did come out with a "shim" kit to help in centering the wheels if this is your problem. If not that, indeed check the driveshaft balance next. Brett
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Good job. I recommend a light viscosity non-detergent oil such as sewing machine oil as preferable to 3-1 oil. 3-1 tends to get more viscous with time. Brett
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Simply stated, OCCC (Occupant & Cargo Carrying Capacity), the industry-wide standard mandated by the Federal Government which went into effect 6/2/08 equals: GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating) -- how much the coach can weigh totally loaded/how much can "sit on the tires." Minus UVW (Unloaded Vehicle Weight)-- the weight of the coach WITH full fuel and propane, but NO water, people, personal gear, dealer added items, etc. ________________________________________________________________________________ As you add water, personal gear, people, tongue weight of any trailer, etc you "use up" OCCC. And your added "stuff" can still be within the OCCC (i.e. under GVWR) and still have one axle overloaded/one axle well underloaded. Bottom line is you need to weight the coach when you have it loaded as you go down the road. Two reasons-- to make sure you are not overloaded AND to allow you to choose the correct tire pressure per your tire manufacturer's inflation chart. Brett
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I made a quick call to the Cummins Hotline (800 343-7357, 0) . The short answer is that this is a non-problem. Brett
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What is ambient temperature? What viscosity oil are you using? What is reading after warm at idle/cruise RPM? Brett
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Welcome to the FMCA Forum. Here is a good resource from FMCA when shopping for towables-- whether new or a 10 year old model: http://www.fmca.com/motorhome/towing/204-towing-index According to this guide, it IS towable 4 wheels down with no modification. Of course, it is always wise to confirm this with either Nissan or even better by reading it in the owners manual. Brett
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Jim, Did you measure the extended length of old and new shocks? And, yes, checking ride height may be in order. But, as I stated above, "While you are under there, determine what, if anything serves limit suspension travel on extension. Some air bag suspensions use HD straps from axle to chassis to limit suspension travel on extension." It may be that CC did not properly limit axle travel on extension, leaving the shocks with a job they were not designed to do. It should be easy to determine which is the cause of the issues if you go through the steps discussed in this thread. Brett
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Driving From Green Bay Wisconsin To Blue Ridge Parkway
wolfe10 replied to pjlvr127@aol.com's question in Destinations/Attractions
JD, Welcome to the FMCA Forum. While not specifically addressing your "Big Rig" question, this recent thread has a lot of information on the Parkway: http://community.fmca.com/index.php?showtopic=1713 Brett -
Ed, Welcome to the FMCA Forum. There are no concrete answers to whether you can reasonably combine two new (same kind and brand is best) with 2 that are a year old. Much of the answer depends on whether the existing batteries have been well cared for: not deeply discharged, never deeply discharged and stored that way, never run low enough on water to expose the plates and never severely overcharged (kept over 14 VDC for long periods of time). If they have been well cared for, I would just add the two new ones. If not, replace all 4. Brett
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In the absence of sun on that tire, my first suspect is that the sender may be off. Use/borrow an IR gun and calibrate it. Normally, the inside dual runs hotter than the outside as there is less air circulation. Brett
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First question-- was that tire in the sun as well as having the very high ambient temperature? Brett
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In order, to control sway: HD sway (aka anti-sway) bar, better shocks, steering dampener. Here are installation instructions for your chassis from Roadmaster, one of the largest makers of sway bars for RV's. This will help you determine if this is something you can do or something you want to hire out: http://www.roadmasterinc.com/pdfinst/1139-147.pdf Brett Wolfe
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Thanks for the post. What coach do you have so we can compare? Brett
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We stayed there last winter on the way to the FMCA Convention in Albuquerque. It is an acceptable CG and our choice in the Deming area. As with all CG's in this area, if the wind is blowing, it can get dusty. Be sure to allow at least several hours in the Museum down town. Brett
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Paul, Energy management can be as basic as adding up all your electrical draws (in amps) times the time they run to give you total AMP-HRS of consumption. Then look at your battery capacity, again expressed in amp-hours. IF in like new condition and IF fully charged, you can reasonably discharge deep cycle batteries to 50% of their capacity. Said another way, a 200 amp-hour battery (or multiple batteries tied into one large battery bank) can theoretically provide you 100 amp-hrs before you need to recharge. If you need to run the generator to recharge (i.e. you are dry camping) most efficient use of generator time is to recharge from 50 to 85%, discharge to 50%, recharge ........ Once a week or so they will need to be fully recharged, but it will take longer to go from 85% to 100% than from 50% to 85% and the amps the charger puts out diminish as the battery becomes charged. Can you find expensive automatic power (amp-hr) meters that do this for you-- sure? Brett
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Tim, Also consider adding window insulation along with upgrade from 13.5 to 15K BTU A/C's. And verify that your dash HVAC is on recirculate. Taking in 110 degree outside air and trying to cool it is not a reasonable proposition. Taking in 80 degree air from the interior is a LOT better. Brett
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Refrigerator will not switch over to LP from AC
wolfe10 replied to nuntoogood@yahoo.com's topic in Systems and Appliances
Welcome to the FMCA Forum. When you say the wires and coils are clean, that really doesn't address the LP flame area. In your Dometic book is a description of the "burner area tune-up". No parts and no special tools are needed. This is done through the refrigerator outside access door. Things that will be addressed in the tune-up that cause your symptoms are: 1. Improper igniter gap. 2. Dirt or rust in the burner tube that reduces the flame to where the thermocouple is not triggered. 3. Soot or dirt on thermocouple/igniter. After the tune-up, stay by the outside refrigerator access door and see how far the sequence goes when someone else puts the refrigerator on "gas": 1. You hear the igniter click. If so, how many times. 2. You hear/feel the gas valve open (same time). 3. You see a flame (blue) from the burner tube. 4. The flame turns the igniter/thermocouple red hot. And, while you are there, it is always a good idea to check the 12 VDC wires to the back of the refrigerator to make sure they are clean and tight. Brett