That was great demo. I did come a cross some other issue with the legs, it was a bit stiff. I took it apart and found out the bearing inside the leg was very rusty and only 3 to 4 bearings left. I bought couple and replaced the faulty and the other one too, put a lot of grease, now seems like brand new. But thanks a gain for your good demo, was very informative.
Thanks for the info on use I’m a relative newbie and my caravan supplier told me the should always be at the angle for a wider support base...... Glad I watched and will probably get a much longer service life from my steadies as a result of the informed tutorial with descriptive reasons why. Cheers
Why are they designed so fragile when they could be made similar to joky wheels and hold much more weight. Just broke the pin on a Jackson just simply by rolling it down to the floor must have been fatigued already.
That was great demo. I did come a cross some other issue with the legs, it was a bit stiff. I took it apart and found out the bearing inside the leg was very rusty and only 3 to 4 bearings left. I bought couple and replaced the faulty and the other one too, put a lot of grease, now seems like brand new. But thanks a gain for your good demo, was very informative.
Thanks for the info on use I’m a relative newbie and my caravan supplier told me the should always be at the angle for a wider support base...... Glad I watched and will probably get a much longer service life from my steadies as a result of the informed tutorial with descriptive reasons why. Cheers
Can a broken roll pin be changed? If so how?
Do you need to remove the stabilizer leg for maintenance or can you grease without removing the leg?
You can grease without removing the leg
Why are they designed so fragile when they could be made similar to joky wheels and hold much more weight. Just broke the pin on a Jackson just simply by rolling it down to the floor must have been fatigued already.