Preventative maintenance
Today, armed with tie wraps, T-9, lubriplate, liquid electrical tape,di-electric grease,wire harness loom,and some hose I attacked the under carriage of my brand new camper. (Cherokee 274RKS). I spent 9 hours, tie wrapping harness's up and out of the way. putting wire loom protector on any and all rub points. Liquid tape was used on all factory connectors.Especially on junction box where trailer harness from tow vehicle connects to trailer side of the harness. A few connectors I cut, soldered, and used shrink tubing on.Opened slide-out to gain access to grounds so I could protect them.The hitch end of the trailer was of particular concern to me.That part of the trailer has lots of brackets and braces built in. All the electrical harnesses and propane run thru that area. So, I removed the tanks to open up the area to work on. The amount of rub points on the propane line and electrical harnesses was surprising. I ran the propane hose thru hose at the rub-points, and used wire loom and hose on the electrical harnesses. When I went to re-install the propane tanks I found something that shocked me. The emergency brake cable for the trailer was actually pinned under the base plate for the propane tanks.It would have never worked.That was a little scary. It was an easy fix, just had to remove propane base plate to free up cable. Anyway to make a long story short, I was very surprised by the amount of wire harnesses that were clearly rubbing on something and if left untouched would have caused numerous headaches down the road. No lube of any kind on slide out gears. I don't know what to make of this. I mean 9 hours of my time fixing these things on a brand new trailer. That seems quite excessive to me. Is Forest Rivers quality control that poor????
I have 20 years experience in the automotive repair industry and 20 years experience in the marine repair industry as well
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