I had my rv trailer stored for the winter. Tongue jack down and only the front scissor jacks. Not sure why I didn't have the rears down as well. But the entry door side tire went flat and the weight of the trailer bent the jack beyond repair. Found my replacements and did both fronts. This is probably the best video I have seen showing the actual progress of how to do this. Very good video. thank you! Saved me a repair quote!
If you ever do it again, try extending the stabilizer so you don't have to hold it up with one hand. Let the ground and the trailer keep it in place. Don't ask me how I figured that out
I had my rv trailer stored for the winter. Tongue jack down and only the front scissor jacks. Not sure why I didn't have the rears down as well. But the entry door side tire went flat and the weight of the trailer bent the jack beyond repair. Found my replacements and did both fronts. This is probably the best video I have seen showing the actual progress of how to do this. Very good video. thank you! Saved me a repair quote!
Good Stuff.... This is one of those things that is easy but we often pay for because we just are 100% of what we are doing.. Thanks
I did the same thing the day I brought my brand-new RV home! Terrible feeling but easy fix.
Great tutorial. You can find individual rv Jack's rated at 5k at Harbor Freight.
Great video!
Thanks for watching
I'm in the same situation you were. I backed into a boulder, but unfortunately the L brackets on my trailer were welded to the frame...
Oh damn. That sucks. These things happen. It’s all part of life with trailers. Lesson learned
If you ever do it again, try extending the stabilizer so you don't have to hold it up with one hand. Let the ground and the trailer keep it in place. Don't ask me how I figured that out
Did u used to hav a gun channel lol