bwade
Newbie RV’er
Posts: 3
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Post by bwade on Feb 18, 2024 16:15:41 GMT -5
We have a 2022 Durango 336FBT that we live in full time. We have about 15,000 miles on the RV and began having issues with the auto leveling not staying calibrated. We found out what was causing the issue after having a tire blow out on interstate 20 west out of Atlanta. We decided to replace all the tires even though they still had tread on them. We had the new tires balanced and filled with nitrogen and the auto issue went away.
All this to say if you having the same problem it may be your tires causing the issue.
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WrkrBee
Newbie RV’er
Retired
Posts: 45
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Post by WrkrBee on Feb 19, 2024 8:18:34 GMT -5
Info needed. How are tires and auto level connected? Vibration from bad tire knocking out calibration? Tire brand?
Just so you know: Nitrogen fill is a scam (atmosphere is 78 percent nitrogen).
Edit: So theoretically, you start with 78% nitrogen in the tire from the initial fill. When the tire loses pressure, the "big" nitrogen molecules should stay in the tire. As pressure drops and you continue to add air to the tire, the nitrogen % should increase. Don't think that is happening.
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