Before I get into the topic listed let me bring you up to date as it has now been 11 months that we have been on the road. We left Paso Robles on Wednesday and moved over to Bakersfield, California. As we have been staying around central and southern California for the past 4 months, our trip map has not changed so I will not bother posting. Next month, our 1 year anniversary, I will post the map along with interesting (at least I think so) statistics/information from our first year out.
Ok, back to the topic. We may no longer own a “fixed home” but we still have a home and home repair is still needed. The nice thing is that we are still under warranty so if anything fails it is repaired for free, plus we do have an extended warranty once the manufactures warranty expires. However, routine maintenance is not covered and must be done. Many of these items are easy and can be done by me. Such things as flushing out the water heater, checking the furnace and refrigerator, checking seals around doors and windows and cleaning the roof. However there was one item I could not do as it requires jacking up the trailer and removing the wheels. First, I do not have the capability to jack the entire trailer up, plus most RV parks frown on working on rigs in the their parks. So that is one reason we are in Bakersfield, there is a Camping World here. An annual maintenance item is to repack the wheel bearings/seals and check the brakes.
I set up the appointment so that we could drive from Paso Robles, drop the trailer off at Camping World, have lunch and then wait for the trailer. Should have only took a couple of hours. The pulled they wheels off and then called me over for a discussion. The trailer has two axles (four wheels). On two of the wheels the seals had failed and all the grease had come out onto the brake pads and drums. This causes the brake pads to be saturated with oil and makes them ineffective. The repair tech said it could be caused by driving in the mountains and heating up the brakes so the seals fail and the grease becomes liquid. Now, I knew we had done a lot of mountain driving when we were in Canada but I was following the maintenance schedule and if the seals failed it should be a warranty item to fix whatever damage was caused. I am no mechanic, but looking at the wheels it was clearly obvious that there was way too much grease on these axles and the seals failed because of over packing. Camping World contacted Jayco and Drexel, the axle manufacturer, and confirmed that there was a problem with some of the axles delivered by Drexel to Jayco in that they were over packed with grease and were failing. So Drexel is covering the repairs to the brakes. The downside is that the parts must come from Drexel and that will take a few days and require us to bring the trailer back to Camping World.
Having a “fixed home” means the repair person comes to you. Having an RV generally means you bring the home to them, and wait!
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