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Post by lynnmor on Jan 20, 2021 21:19:15 GMT -5
This thread went from electric stabilizers to automatic leveling, apples and oranges.
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Post by nvguy on Jan 20, 2021 21:19:28 GMT -5
I hated putting down blocks, check level, add 2 recheck level etc. PITA. Now I set a stack under each leg, push a button and stand back and watch. I know when the dance is over the RV is level, one and done. Same procedure I use, almost to easy....
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Post by Chuck on Jan 22, 2021 17:17:41 GMT -5
This thread went from electric stabilizers to automatic leveling, apples and oranges. We do wonder at times that's for sure lynnmor
Chuck
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Post by amvince on Jan 22, 2021 22:09:04 GMT -5
Well back to electric stabilizers. When the first time you take the trailer out it is 36 degrees and pouring rain you will appreciate not having to run around the trailer with a drill. It sure helps when you get a space that is level side to side to begin with.
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Post by rvcouple on May 21, 2022 15:31:33 GMT -5
We had electric stabilizers on our I-Go. They were OK, but there is a clutch in the motor for safety and preventing bending and breaking the stabilizers. The problem was that every morning, after moving around in the trailer in the evening, we had to bump up the stabilizers because the clutch slips a little every time you moved around. If we were around the camper all day, it seemed I was bumping them 3 - 4 times a day.
Our Connect came with scissor jacks and I use my drill to set them when we get there and don't touch them again until we leave. It also takes about the same time to run two scissor jacks down with the drill as it does to lower the twin stabilizers on one end of the trailer.
I won't spend the money on them again, but if you don't mind some bounce in the trailer as you move around or bumping them up often to eliminate that bounce, the are convenient.
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