Re: Alignment. Good place in Belvidere, IL.
Reply #13 –
Cm and ray both mentioned during the unihome original seminar in late 1987 that they designed the chassis like the euros did their cars. They built the chassis to the Michelin xga-1's you have.
I am at 95 on the rear duals and at 105 on the front with my slightly heavier coach. I am lightly loaded versus a long time user.
I might try a litte more air pressure as michelins have always been a soft sided tire carcass.
Two schools of thought on blowouts. Do you hold the tire rigid to the rim or have the sidewall shred and have the left over steel belts hold the tire straight against the rim while stopping. Hence the knock that the michelins are destroyed in a flat. Done on purpose.
A good test was to run the coach on a large piece of white concrete and run it through a water puddle prior to the concrete patch. Drive a short distance onto the concrete and stop. Get out and go back and examine the wet spots. Are they the same darkness all the way across? Or lighter on the edges? Or the middle? You can laugh but I remembering this working well. Lots of skeptics before none afterwards.
The tires add 10 pounds warm so you are there sometimes. My real fanatics and I ran nitrogen in the tires to get identical tire patterns hot or cold. Takes a few times to get most of the air out. All airplane tires are nitrogen.
My riding herd on the steering wheel was much less with careful ride height and exact tire pressures.
Now a design problem. If you raise and lower the coach does the steering wheel move?
Unwind and rewind? That's the amount of difference between the pittmans arm end point and the suspensions locating arms.
Old chassis coaches were really bad. In a dip the coach went right and as it extended past the normal ride height position it went left and came back straight IF the ride height valve was accurate enough.
Hard to get the steering arm and the suspension exactly the same length and to pivot on the exact same point.
If you look underneath your cach the aha moment will occur. Also on early unihomes and unicoaches the steering box was not out as far as the later models. The pitman arm was at an angle to the suspension. Not parallel. Suspension movement up and down causes the coach to turn slightly.
The old unihomes steering shaft was on a linkage to the box. At an angle. Some drove great Others needed reinforcing or reorientation of the shaft u joints.
My 97's box is outboard as I understand it and the steering column is a straight shot with no u joints.
Amazing the info around if you are interested enough to ask why something does or does not work as well as others.
I bet James is well aware of this. Ask him? May be only the real early ones. Who knows.
My 97 requires very little input. I could put more caster in the front end but it would not turn as well...
Fine line