Having good shocks keeps the glasses, beans and hiking boots in their cabinets, not smashed on the floor. Keeps the windows and doors intact and the stove and sink anchored to their counters and the seat and bed cushions in their places instead of mixed in with the smashed glasses and beans on the floor. And keeps the wheels on the ground a higher percentage of the time while traveling. The trailer is more stable in a cross wind when the tires are on the ground, tends to sway more easily when the tires are in the air. A first check for their condition involves jumping up and down on the back bumper. If the trailer bounces more than one cycle after you get it moving and jump off the shocks are not doing their job. If you can't make it move except by tire flex, it could be that the shocks are rusted tight not allowing the springs to take up motion. A final check on shock quality is to compare their resistance of motion in each direction with a new shock. Likely your old ones if not rusted fast move easily giving no benefit. Gerald J. To unsubscribe or to change to a daily Digest, please go to http://www.airstream.net/vaclist/listoffice.html If replying back to this message, please delete all the unnecessary original text from your reply.
[VAC] Re: Newbie Trailer Shock Question
Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer Thu, 28 Jun 2001 13:37:43 -0700
