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Do Some Travel Trailers Have Levelling Jacks?

DallasSteve
Nomad
Nomad
I read an article explaining the difference between stabilizer jacks and leveling jacks. I owned a motor home in the past and it had automatic leveling jacks. I understand from the article that stabilizer jacks are not designed to lift a travel trailer, just to stop them from moving side to side. Some of the more expensive travel trailers that I see advertised for sale say they have leveling jacks. Are those actually leveling jacks designed to raise and level the trailer? Are they operated from controls inside the trailer or outside?
2022 JAYCO JAY FLIGHT SLX 8 324BDS
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All my exes live in Texas, that's why I live in an RV
20 REPLIES 20

Reisender
Nomad
Nomad
Levelling jacks systems for trailers but it’s rare to see them. For us it’s just an extra minute or two to level with those Lego block thingies. We only have an 18 foot single axle trailer though.

p38fln
Explorer
Explorer
We have a friend with a 1984 Coachmen 32 foot travel trailer. It's virtually identical to our 1991 Citation 32 foot travel trailer. The Coachmen was obviously a higher class unit when new, his has leveling jacks at all 4 corners along with a built in analog clock and water tank sensors, while the Citation...has absolutely nothing. I level the Citation by putting jack stands under the frame between the rear axle and last crossmember before the bumper, lowering the nose jack, raising the jack stands, then raise the nose jack back up. I'm not trying to get the wheels off the ground just make the bathtub drain properly and keep the thing from bouncing everywhere when someone walks through the bedroom.

We had a 1991 Starcraft Starburst popup trailer before the Citation and its built in stabilizers could only be used to 'level' the trailer by messing with the nose jack as well. In that Starburst's case, if you didn't put some tension on the stabilizer jacks the door wouldn't stay shut and the single axle trailer would get extremely bouncy if someone got in one of the bunks without getting the jacks SOLIDLY on the ground.

FYI - He said only one leveling jack still works and he uses a bottle jack and a bunch of wood to level it.

Grit_dog
Nomad III
Nomad III
Steve, go look at some travel trailers. That will answer most of your questions with visual cues.
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2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

ralph_day
Explorer
Explorer
I have the little stick on levels on my 19' coach. Just be sure you're looking at the correct one when levelling. We just got back from a trip, had the Anderson levelers under the tires in the usual driveway spot, but couldn't get the bubble in the middle! We were looking at the end to end level (on the trailer side) instead of the one on the trailer front for side to side level. Tired maybe?

APT
Explorer
Explorer
There are systems available on some TT brands from the factory. I personally would not use that feature as a filter for which TT I buy. Every TT comes with a tongue jack (manual crank or electric power) which covers front to back leveling. Side to side as mentioned already is done with something under the low side tires (boards, plastic lego blocks, etc.). For me, I think the time savings of having a fully automatic system is about 5 minutes per arrival/departure. Cost for an electric jack is ~150 and another $50 for lego blocks.
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penguin149
Explorer
Explorer
Pbutler97 wrote:
If you know what you're looking at, and crawl under most travel trailers that were built in the last 10 years or so and are on a Lippert frame, you might have second thoughts before you jack it up to change a tire let alone jacking the entire thing up off the ground to level it.


My thoughts as well! TT frames seem to be the thinnest possible to reduce weight and allow for more vehicles to be used as TV's. Leveling jacks would test frame strength and probably not turn out well! Same reason adding a lot of weight to the rear bumper scares me.
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MitchF150
Explorer III
Explorer III
I think those self leveling jacks are placed a lot closer to the axles than at the very ends of the rig like the stabilizer jacks are placed..

I got the "strong arm" stabilizer jack extensions and those made a huge difference in the bounce/wobble of the rig once leveled..

I'll use boards under the tires to bring the rig close if it's off more than a full bubble of level just sitting there. More if necessary.. But, I crank them enough to get some weight on them to 'stabilize' the rig, then crank on the strong arm bars and it's pretty much rock solid at that point.

I know that's not your question, but I also jack up my trailer with a bottle jack to check the brakes and pack the bearings and I put jack stands on either side of the frame as close to the axles as I can and it's actually very solid!

I'd do that in the camp ground, but too much trouble and effort when my strong arms do a good enough job for "camping".. 🙂


Mitch
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Jack_Diane_Free
Explorer
Explorer
I have a friend with a large TT with an auto levelling system and it works quite well. No problems after 3 years of use.

I-Can-Am-Can-Yo
Explorer
Explorer
Quadra makes systems for leveling just about anything.

JRscooby
Explorer II
Explorer II
Gdetrailer wrote:
How hard is it to toss a board under the trailer wheels and pull onto the board?

Answer, pretty easy.

How hard to toss boards under two or more wheels of a motor home?

Answer, not as easy as a trailer.


MH, you need to check 2 levels. 1 side to, the other front/rear. Then add what need to lift for the lowest corner. Then place the stacks so 3 wheels top at same time.



They do make levels with markings in 1 inch increments that takes most of the guess work out of leveling a trailer.


I use plastic blocks, and have my bubbles marked so each mark is another layer in the stack

When you get to your site, check the side to side level before unhitching, place your wood or plastic leveling blocks in front or behind the trailer wheels then pull on to the blocks. Now you have side to side done.



This is where many people have problems. Put board in front of left tire, when the right drops in a hole as you pull forward, too much board. Best idea is stack your boards centered on axle, move the trailer until can slide stack in line with wheel, put trailer back where it was, just higher.

Gdetrailer
Explorer III
Explorer III
DallasSteve wrote:
Gdetrailer

Thanks for those tips. Maybe that's the better solution. Are the stabilizers/tongue lift usually manual? Can I use something like an electric screwdriver?


You can buy aftermarket electric tongue jacks and replace the manual tongue jack if the trailer was not equipped with an electric jack.

For bolted/welded on stabilizers you can often adapt a battery powered drill to run them up and down to speed up setup and tear down.

Pbutler97
Explorer
Explorer
If you know what you're looking at, and crawl under most travel trailers that were built in the last 10 years or so and are on a Lippert frame, you might have second thoughts before you jack it up to change a tire let alone jacking the entire thing up off the ground to level it.

spoon059
Explorer II
Explorer II
Yes, I've got friends with a newer trailer and leveling jacks. Pretty cool, seems much more stable than just leveling jacks.
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DallasSteve
Nomad
Nomad
LMHS wrote:
I was always given to understand that one really shouldn't lift any camper/motorhome off the ground and not have the tires supported. I know that it caused problems with the suspension on an Eagle bus to have it's tires unsupported.

I never tried to lift the tires of my motorhome off the ground, for that reason, but most of the time I was able to get a good leveling with the wheels on the ground. When I couldn't get fully level we were able to tolerate it for a day or two in that park.
2022 JAYCO JAY FLIGHT SLX 8 324BDS
2022 FORD F-250 XL CREW CAB 4X4
All my exes live in Texas, that's why I live in an RV