This is my first camper so I really don't know how to store it. Letting it sit on the jacks for a long period of time doesn't seem to be a good idea. The best thing I could come up with on short notice was to lower the camper onto some cinder blocks straddled by 2x6s. I'd prefer to find something taller so I didn't have to lower the jacks so much but I'm not sure what to use.
How is everyone else storing their campers?
Long term camper storage
Started by
DirtyDog
, Nov 11 2005 03:59 AM
5 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 11 November 2005 - 03:59 AM
#2
Posted 14 July 2006 - 02:11 AM
My neighbor had a Sun Lite pop up TC that he made some low sawhorses to set on. It seems like it would be a good idea to have some support in the middle of the camper. Wonder what FWC says about it.
#3
Posted 15 July 2006 - 01:54 AM
How is everyone else storing their campers?
I store mine on a pair of saw horses, but a friend at www.expeditioncampers.com (camuyano) had this great dolly:
http://www.expeditio...wtopic.php?t=20
Cheers
Mark
#4
Posted 15 July 2006 - 04:30 PM
I'm using aluminum saw horses from Home Depot now. They are only rated to 1000 pounds each but they are only sharing the load with the jacks. I just use them to stabalize the whole thing.
That dolly is a great idea. I'd probably make mine taller though. The lower the support is, the more turning of the jacks to get the thing on and off of the platform. Slow and tedious work.
That dolly is a great idea. I'd probably make mine taller though. The lower the support is, the more turning of the jacks to get the thing on and off of the platform. Slow and tedious work.
#5
Posted 17 July 2006 - 10:22 PM
Here's how the previous owner stored it.
I may do something similar. He also had a pallet on casters that he would lower it onto to move around his 2 car garage. I agree that lowering that much will be a big pain to raise back up.
I may do something similar. He also had a pallet on casters that he would lower it onto to move around his 2 car garage. I agree that lowering that much will be a big pain to raise back up.
#6
Posted 07 August 2006 - 05:59 PM
I picked up a cheapy trailer from Harbor Freight. It works great and I can roll the camper in and out of the garage using a trailer dolly. The whole set up including the dolly was less than $200s. The disadvantage is that it requires a **** load of cranking because its so low to the ground. I suppose I could build it up but the way I figure it its 10 minutes out of my life so no biggie.
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