I made my own with 4x4 wood cut them to size & on the bottom 30 degrees & screwed a eye hook & attached them with a tide down from one end to the other end $20 with everything. Works perfectly.
These could be great for our 38 foot Reflection! The bouncing has been one of the biggest adjustments for my family living full-time stationary. Thanks for sharing!
Looks like a good system but $195 for each pair is a bit steep since most campers will need two. I have JT Strong Arm stabilizers on my 33 footer and it does a great job eliminating the bounce. Came standard on my rig. Thanks for the video guys!
Hi Another great video. When you put the stabilizer on the front and back could you put another one on the opposite direction on the frame. Will that be more sturdy or over kill.
So they don’t attach to the camper? They look solid. The holes seem spaced apart on the leg so do you think you would need a spacer if the leg was too short ( in between holes)?
Simply place good tension on the chains manually and the come-along will do the work. You certainly don’t need a cheater bar to help install or remove.
@@tommcl386 hoping to review JT’s soon as well... JT’s are permanently installed which some like and others do not. No protection from travel debris is a concern. I think both are probably good products.
Looks nice, we Love American companies. We will check them out. And Brooke you are the Lady. Just asking, how much money is he paying you to stay with him. 👍👍
Disappointed in this video.. it would have been a great video if you showed how to set up or breakdown. Needs more details like you did when you added the new brakes. This was just a promo. Need more details than a picture.
A setup video has already been done, I’ll link it at the end of this reply. Quite frankly they’re so simple we didn’t feel the need to over explain them and yes... we are promoting them because they work great and we really like them. Just to set expectations we are not “professional “ RUclipsrs. Our priority at the campsite is our family. Companies send us products and when they’re good we love to share those products with you guys. Two vacation days were taken to film the disc brake video. That is something we simply can’t do often. We have full time jobs that have nothing to do with RUclips. The point of this reply is to simply set expectations. If fancy editing and big productions are what you’re looking for this little homegrown channel may come up short. Here is the link for setup. ruclips.net/video/S0d0GNgZMgI/видео.html
Haha. A few things to help ease your mind. 1. Many do not have electric jacks. 2. Electric jacks are notorious for failing. Like it or not these things work like a champ.
Not to argue your point. But most travel trailers do not have electric jacks. Some come equipped with electric stabilizers. These are okay. They don't eliminate the issue.
The part of reason why these work so well is they are 20-24” outside the frame structure making the trailer more stable an less bounce! The stock jacks are below the frame! I have also made a pr of these with 2x6 an eye hooks an ratchet strap. This is a good idea that should come stock?
For less than $20, 2 piceces of wood, 2 eye bolts and a ratchet strap from Harbor Freight. I've been using it for years and it is Rock Solid!
I made my own with 4x4 wood cut them to size & on the bottom 30 degrees & screwed a eye hook & attached them with a tide down from one end to the other end $20 with everything. Works perfectly.
These could be great for our 38 foot Reflection! The bouncing has been one of the biggest adjustments for my family living full-time stationary. Thanks for sharing!
A chain binder, not a come-along... Looks like a nice system. Thanks for the video.
Good call... I’m just a hillbilly... when we say come along we know what we mean. Haha.
@@WanderingWeekends In reality, a load binder. It doesn't bind the chain; the chain binds the load. (Take it from an old oilfield hillbilly. :-)
Looks like a good system but $195 for each pair is a bit steep since most campers will need two. I have JT Strong Arm stabilizers on my 33 footer and it does a great job eliminating the bounce. Came standard on my rig. Thanks for the video guys!
We have the strong arms as well
We must have cheap jacks as we still feel every footstep.
Those may even work with a truck camper.
Smart thinking
Cool. Sometimes simple works best.
I bought a dock from Them. High quality and a wonderful company.
Very nice quality.
Hi Another great video. When you put the stabilizer on the front and back could you put another one on the opposite direction on the frame. Will that be more sturdy or over kill.
That’s a load binder Cory.
So they don’t attach to the camper? They look solid. The holes seem spaced apart on the leg so do you think you would need a spacer if the leg was too short ( in between holes)?
They’re very adjustable. Unless your rig sits unusually high or extremely low you should be good. Website specifies distances.
How tight are you having to adjust the chain with the come-along? Is there a recommend tension?
Simply place good tension on the chains manually and the come-along will do the work. You certainly don’t need a cheater bar to help install or remove.
These are all decent designs, but at $400 for four, there is no way. I'll stick with the 2X4 connected with tow strap to accomplish this.
Certainly not for those looking for bargains.
Just went to the site, there site says each, do they mean pair? ( 2 of them )
If you want 4 individual “legs” like we have on our rig you’ll need 2 “sets”.
Come along? It’s a China chain binder!
Thanks hot rod
WOW!!! Those suckers are expensive! $440 for two sets.
Definitely pricey but the value is there. They’ll easily last a lifetime.
I would love to buy a set but not for $220/set. That is way over my budget.
Great review though. Love your videos.
I thought the same thing.
@@darrelltrammel1623 I may look at the JT Strong Arm a little closer now.
@@tommcl386 hoping to review JT’s soon as well... JT’s are permanently installed which some like and others do not. No protection from travel debris is a concern. I think both are probably good products.
Looks nice, we Love American companies. We will check them out. And Brooke you are the Lady. Just asking, how much money is he paying you to stay with him. 👍👍
I’m going broke Tim... the whole reason I started a RUclips channel!! 🤣😂
FYI. It’s a Boomer. Not a come along. Nice product. I think we could these. Thanks for the review man.
I also made my own from 2x4 lumber. A couple of eyelet bolts and 2 ratchet straps and it's done! Sorry but those you describe are overpriced IMHO.
Disappointed in this video.. it would have been a great video if you showed how to set up or breakdown. Needs more details like you did when you added the new brakes. This was just a promo. Need more details than a picture.
A setup video has already been done, I’ll link it at the end of this reply. Quite frankly they’re so simple we didn’t feel the need to over explain them and yes... we are promoting them because they work great and we really like them. Just to set expectations we are not “professional “ RUclipsrs. Our priority at the campsite is our family. Companies send us products and when they’re good we love to share those products with you guys. Two vacation days were taken to film the disc brake video. That is something we simply can’t do often. We have full time jobs that have nothing to do with RUclips. The point of this reply is to simply set expectations. If fancy editing and big productions are what you’re looking for this little homegrown channel may come up short. Here is the link for setup. ruclips.net/video/S0d0GNgZMgI/видео.html
First
In the age of electric jacks, why in gods green earth would anybody use a come along, for that. This entire videos of mine boggling.
Haha. A few things to help ease your mind. 1. Many do not have electric jacks. 2. Electric jacks are notorious for failing.
Like it or not these things work like a champ.
Not to argue your point. But most travel trailers do not have electric jacks. Some come equipped with electric stabilizers. These are okay. They don't eliminate the issue.
The part of reason why these work so well is they are 20-24” outside the frame structure making the trailer more stable an less bounce! The stock jacks are below the frame! I have also made a pr of these with 2x6 an eye hooks an ratchet strap. This is a good idea that should come stock?