During my 275 mile drive today i started wondering if all my BS about the drive ability of my fixed coach got me to think "does everyone else's coach drive like mine?"
I barely move the wheel. Small corrections once in a while. No dead spot. Is this unusual or normal? No idea as I have not driven other Unicoaches. I wonder if part is the long wheelbase on the 40'?
I hope yours all drive similarly?
My coach handels really well. Just point it and go.
OK, here is another experience from a different type of suspension compared to most of you.
Our coach--a 36' 1989 Foretravel Grand Villa with the Oshkosh Truck chassis--has leaf springs, the original shock absorbers, and has an on-board critic---Rocket, our 18 year old cat.
Before I had the front leaf springs replaced it was white knuckle steering time. All over the road and unpredictable when we hit a bump or a crosswind. The only thing Rocket would do was lay on my lap with his head hanging over my thigh like he was carsick. This happened whenever we were traveling. The DW would cover her face with a map when we met a semi, had a crosswind, and narrow shoulders with deep ditches or rails on our right.
Now, cut to today: Rocket slept on our bed in the back (over the engine) for over an hour while we were traveling. This never happened before. Before new leaf springs, start the engine and here he would come--running, up front. He now will get something to eat or drink or even use his litter box while we are moving.
He even has gone so far as to lay up on the dash and watch the scenery.
ME? I can now steer with one finger on the bottom of the steering wheel. The coach now goes where I point it.
How is that for an improvement from before putting on new leaf springs?
The coach has Rocket's approval now!!!
Honestly, last year I had a tad bit wander in the front end but it was tolerable. New tires and that new steering box made all the difference in the world. Every time I drive somewhere now after parking for a couple weeks I always have that conversation with myself ( Not crazy just travel alone, LOL) about how comfortable I feel behind the wheel and how nice this 21 year old coach handles on the highway. That makes it easier to forget about all the hours of constant maintenance required on a rolling earthquake and helps fill my time in my retirement. Although, sometimes I could do without some of the pesky difficult issues. Safe travels!!!
Replaced all 10 of our torque rod bushings (20),tightened things up a little.
Here's my experience:
93 225 36': Not good. Constant adjustment required. Records showed a bundle spent over the years trying to correct.
99 320 36': Lots better. Still some wandering. More toe-in helped considerably.
95 300 40': Really good. Better than the other two.
97 270 34': Best yet. Excellent. Big surprise. I expected the 34' to not handle as well as the others.
jor
Keep it coming. I do not know what is normal in these so any feedback helps me and hopefully others
36" Straight as an arrow, old shocks, old steering box, old bags*, cheap Toyo's.
Gene's alignment did the alignment, he is the best in the area with FT's. Made all the difference in the world.
Set the cruise at 62-65, sit back, one arm on the arm rest, other on the wheel.
Rides, drives and tows our Wrangler like a float.
Could it be better? Maybe. Am I unhappy in any way? No.
As long as it starts and gets us there and back, we are as happy as we can be.
Cheers
Chris
* replaced 2 front bags behind front axle to experiment, then decided the rest are fine. I carry a spare new one, tools and parts to change on the road if need be.
Everything original up front with Cooper 295/75R22.5 mounted by PO. Mixed tires in the rear with Cooper, Firestone and one I can't remember. Due for replacement for the Coopers. Won't buy again as they have lots of small cracks where the Firestone and other brand rear tire look like new. I put Coopers on an SUV and they were the worst handling of all I've mounted on several cars.
Other than that, it drives great, no wandering, no tire noise, rides well. Like Chris says, as long as it starts...
Pierce
Lots of people love them, I highly dislike Coopers. Had lots of bad luck with them. It's what les Snobs pushes. They are crappy, cheap tires in my opinion.
Here come the haters..LOL
Chris
My '81 rides like a dump truck but steers straight and no wander. The Hankooks on it are now 20 years old and no cracks. It will need new shoes if it ever leave the property.
Probably popular as they were made here before expanding overseas. Interesting history at: Cooper Tire & Rubber Company - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_Tire_%26_Rubber_Company). Our have not shown any signs of tread wear but pieces chunk off and the rubber just looks suspect. The SUV tires had terrible turn in and never had a good feeling if in a hurry on winding roads even if I pumped them up.
The OEM Bridgestones lasted just over 80,000 on the RAV4. Did everything well with a slightly hard ride and a little noise as they got older plus they are expensive. Probably not expensive when you consider how long they lasted.
Have been impressed with Atturo's AZ800 series on the ML320. Optional size is very wide, looks like it belongs on a Ferrari, rides well, no noise, sticks like glue in the dry and OK in wet and snow. Racers use the 850 series and it's available in run flat version in many sizes. Outstanding in wet and snow. All are speed rated V, W or Y. Out the door on these big tires was $430 even including old tire disposal.
Pierce
The truest and most durable car/light truck, tire I have ever seen are the Nokian . Made is Russia . I now mount them on everything. My wifes Badilac, to my double car trailer. Some are extra load.
Fair price best quality ever. Ilooked at 22.5 sizes but have not found enough yet.
As an aside to my original post i tested a slower tow speed than my normal 70+ today from New Mexico to casa grande, az.
20k miles at the higher speed averaged 8.2. Same setup as before but 66mph to pull on the trucks that were gps governed to 65 and I had a front left corner cross wind at 20mph for a hundred miles or so and averaged 9.5 mpg
Sweet spot seems to be 1410 rpm. At least for me and my setup and this day. 90 to 97 degrees ambient.
I think I will clear my long term VPMS's trip meters to continue at this being the new norm.
I have one trip meter on screen from the ECU replacement 2,900 miles ago and another that reflects the current trip at 2,400 miles and a third one for the current tank.
Plus I have the mode on and let it pull grades at whatever it wants to do and I do let it free run down hills up to the 75mph speed limit.
We will see but seems much better at 4 mph less and 100 rpm less than before.