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Originally Posted by Ron & Alice
Ok, first of all, we cancelled the aluminum piece and the repairmen. Their solution didn't seem to solve the issue. What has gone wrong? What has to be replaced or repaired?
Today, I crawled underneath and jacked up the front slide corner, and removed the adjustment bracket as the center adjustment bolt was siezed. On our trailer, the adjustment bolt has a nut welded to the top side of the plate + a nut on the bottom side of the plate which the capscrew travels along. In my opinion, this nut is there to lock the adjustment in position. As in your photo, I have the 2 slotted plates with nuts & bolts to lock in the adjustment. One of these plates, being bolted onto the slide unit (bottom frame near wheel well) and the other plate is bolted on to the square slide-bar mechanism. Also, the striker bell is bolted on to the bottom slide-bar by means of an independant plate.
I managed to free up the capscrew and nut, reinstalled the unit, secured all nuts & bolts in place, and by then it was "Happy Hour". The slideout is now positioned slightly higher, better than before. I will continue to work on this continuing saga tomorrow, and will post more photos then.
About the floor "gap", it is not a gap so that you would see the ground through the opening. I am referring to the height that the slideout floor settled in, in the fully out position from when we first bought the unit, until we had this current problem. ie, it was approx. 1" higher than the trailer floor. Now, it appears to be approx. level with the trailer floor (excl. carpets).
Ron
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Ron
I “think” I now understand what you are saying about the 1” higher. Do you mean the entire length of the slide floor is 1” higher then the main camper floor? That sounds like the slide actually never went all the way out. If so that is a slide travel stroke adjustment. Since you are now lower that starts to validate that the slide is actually now out further and the floor is sliding down the cam surface on the trough in the camper floor. Again I’m assuming I under stand that the entire slide floor is not down flat with the main camper floor. YES/No?
See here for the Lippert slide mechanism manual. This is the basics manual and is not tailored to the Sunline but it shows the slide drive mechanism and who to adjust it.
http://www.lippertcomponents.com/Own...deout-Web1.pdf
I believe part if not all of your problem is you are suffering from an out of adjustment slide.
Lets talk about the slide floor being flat. It needs to be. I’m going out on a limb here not having pics of yours or all your problems to confirm Sunline did not change a qty of stuff that may not exactly match to the pics I’m going to show you. The key is you understand what I’m telling you so you can see how yours is working.
If you pick up the rug flap on the slide the slide floor should be down flat tight against the metal trough
lowest point. In the 2005 models the metal was changed to a plastic guide trough but the same thing applies. When the slide is full out the floor drops down to the bottom of the trough. The top of the slide floor should be real close to the top of the camper floor. As you can see here the slide floor and the camper floor are the same.
Now how does one adjust the slide “out” travel? 1st I need to know when your slide extends all the way out you should hear, clunk, clunk of the slide motor drive clutch tripping. Once you hear that clunk you let go of the button. If you are not hearing this clunk that is a separate problem. Please confirm you have the clunk, clunk at the end of slide “out” travel.
I’m assuming it did go clunk, clunk, clunk. That is the mechanical end of stroke of the slide motor drive actuator. There is no more stroke left. That is by design to work that way and all it means is the mechanical slide drive went to end of stroke and it may not mean the slide is all the way out yet.
In order to know if the slide is full out, 1st it must reach full mechanical stroke and go clunk, clunk of the overload clutch. Then you need to look inside the camper at the ends of the slides, both front and back ends top and bottom. Your slide either stops by reaching the camper wall (like mine does) or it stops by the full length vertical aluminum angle on the ends of the slide compressing in the slide seals. Look at the top and then the bottom. The top and bottom need to be parallel. The slide is on an angle until it fully extends out then in the last ~ 2 inches of stroke it trues up.
Look at the top
Then look at the bottom
My slide is not yet, fully out in those 2 pics. It needs to travel yet another ~ 1” And the slide floor will not yet be fully down so the slide floor and camper floor are level to each other. Check both front and rear end of the slide. They may be different and if so there are separate adjustments for front and rear. While my slide touches the wall, since I do not have pics of yours I can’t tell what yours is made like. Bottom line, top and bottom of the slide needs to be even distance from the wall. That means the seals are compressed evenly.
Now how to adjust this if one end or both ends are not even. There is a master rack and a slave rack. The slide motor drive acme screw drive (slide actuator) runs the master rack. It looks like this. It is the one with the “stop can” on it and a large threaded rod adjusting screw on the end of the slide drive actuator.
With the slide extended “out”. If this master rack end of the slide needs to go "out" more you loosen up jam nut 2 and the lock nut. Then using the nuts, adjust the correct nut to push or pull the slide in or out so that the master rack end of the slide seats correctly inside the camper. Again the slide face should be even distance top and bottom and the slide floor should of dropped down level to the main camper floor. This does only the master rack end and the end you need to do 1st. Once this end is done or was OK, then you go to the slave drive rack.
Edit:1-30-11 NOTE: By adjusting the position of the master rack (loosening Jam nut 2 and Nylock nut and adjusting) this is a global adjustment. It will move both the master rack and the slave rack at the same time so both ends of the slide will move in the same direction as you are adjusting. This is due to the square shaft drive under the camper. The master rack actually drives the slave rack. If there is excessive wear in the bolts that connect the square drive tube to the pinion gear shaft on either the master rack or the slave rack, this excess clearance will allow moving of the master rack end of the slide first, then after all the excess clearance is taken up the slave end starts to move. Some small delay in the slave rack is normal as there is inherent wind up or play in the system. If you are in the 1/4" to 1/2" or greater of slide movement delay on the slave rack I would consider that a lot of play and you need to address the wear/play in the square drive tube system. This play can explain why you may be tight to the wall when the slide is "out" but then be short travel bringing the slide in or vica versa.
I have also seen on a fellow camper friend's unit when their slide was adjusted wrong before the took ownership that the stop can was not adjusted correct and the slide was over compressing the slide closed. In time the wall structure started to let loose and when the slide closed the entire wall at the bottom shifted approx 3/16 to 1/4" inward. It appears who ever (prior owner) tried to to close up a gap on the slave rack end by over adjusting the master rack. In doing so they broke the wall structure trying to over compensate.
Under the camper there is a square shaft that connects the master rack to the slave rack. At this point we are going to assume you do not have to unhook the square tube and adjust as we are going to use the end of the slave arm first. Look for this end. You will see 2, large bolts that bolt the slide support end to the support arm. The support end is slotted.
You can see the 2 bolts in this pic. That slide support end is slotted on top.
You loosen those 2 bolts and then you can push the entire slide or out to make the wall inside parallel on the top and bottom and the slide floor should drop down level on the floor on that end. If you do not have enough slot, then you have to crawl under the camper and take out the 1/4” bolt and turn the rack drive a tooth or two and put the bolt back in. If you going to the trouble of moving the rack, put the slots on the slave arm end back in the middle so you have some extra slot to work with.
Now caution to not get too carried away on the slave drive arm to make the slide work exactly right on full extended out. Reasoning being is it can affect the slide “in” if you are too far out. Basically the slide is built so both ends are the same width. So when you reach full out, that slotted adjustment for being in mechanical time with the master drive arm is parallel with the slave drive on the seals face. While there is an adjustment on the mater drive arm for “in” there is not on the slave drive arm. Those slots work both positions in and out. So you do not want to over do it when the slide is out or else you can affect retract in motion. So don;t over do it and you need to check in the "in" motion to make sure you are not over doing it on the out motion. Or you have a really worn hole in the square drive shaft that runs the slave drive rack and you loose a lot of motion. Then the square shaft needs a new hole in it. There should not be a lot of play in the system so both front and rear move at once. You could be fighting a lot of play in the system from worn square drive shaft holes. If the front and back do not turn at the same time the slide will go in and out on an angle.
So that is how to adjust the extended “out” position. The in position should stop when the slide drive actuator meets resistance of the slide seals sealing up against the side of the camper. The slide actuator actually has more inches of stroke on the way in then needed. So the slide come is, it seals to the side of the camper and then stalls out the motor. When you see it stop moving you take your finger off the switch.
For the "in" retracted position the stop can comes into play. It is NOT to be used as a hard dead stop to stop the slide from coming in. The slide should be up against the seals of the camper that stop the motion. To adjust the "in" motion, loosen up the stop can and back it away from the frame.
Close the slide. It should be sealing up against the side of the camper. Look at both front and rear. If the slave drive end is not seating tight enough then you over did it on those slots in the slave drive end bracket or you have excess play in the square drive shaft setup. If the square drive is tight and no large play, open the slide and move it in a little in on the slotted arm end bracket.
Once you have it sealing up good, then take the stop can and screw it towards the camper frame until it just reaches the frame and then a little bit of compression and tighten the lock nut. The slide should completely compress the seals and reach the stop can at the same time. I called Lippert and got this straight from them direct.
That is the in and out. Now the up and down verticl where you took off the slide drive arm ends and free’ed up that jack screw. You actually set them with the slide closed. Again this is give and take. If you adjust the height it affects both the in and out positions.
When the slide is “in” look along the top of the slide on how it seats into the camper flange along the top.
Look at the rear top
Look at the front top
The gap between the slide aluminum outer flange and the camper flange should be close to parallel gap front and rear. Now the camper may not be exactly square not the slide. You can see mine is a little out of parallel. The key is, is it a lot out of parallel. By adjusting the height to make the slide inside even and try to not hit the wall paneling like you have now, need to keep in mind that vertical adjustment also interacts with the slide being closed. So it will be a give and take adjustment. The slide floor on the ends needs to sit flat down in the trough on both front and rear ends. If one end is high, then adjusting outside can help. And it may need to be the opposite rack that needs to go up to bring down the slide. Again it will be give and take inside and outside as that 1 adjustment interacts with open and closed.
Since your slide may have been out of adjust for a long time, (since you bought it), the entire slide may have a twist in it from sitting uneven. And when you set up camp this time the entire camper may not be as even and aggravating the wall panel rip you are seeing even worse.
Once you get it adjusted correct your last option is to chamfer the top slide flange or the wall pocket to cheat and give you more clearance like Bill said. If the entire slide has a twist in it, it may take a long time to untwist out against a properly adjusted surface. The clearance chamfer may buy you the time until that occurs.
Good luck and helps this helps.
John