Winnie levels side to side using the back legs, both front legs are deployed at the same time, haven't found a spot that bad that has required a lot of levelling side to side, front to back is generally the big one. Often the front wheels are off the ground, not by much, but still enough to unload the front tyres.Greynomad wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 9:09 pm T1,
Looks like you’re having a fun time disassembling & reassembling the washing machine!
Not TOO many parts left over.
On a side note:
One of the Winnebago bods chipped me for lifting both front wheels off the dirt to level Girt on a site with an erosion gully right where we had to put the front end.
Explained that different pressures on the left & right hydraulic rams could pop the windscreen & permanently twist the chassis.
Lesson learned. We moved to another site.
I doubt I'll have too many excess parts with this one. Full credit to the engineering design that uses an all plastic frame and body with only two pressed steel braces, one that basically hold the top apart, because the drum springs pull the centre in, and the control panel uses one to mount on across the front so it holds it in shape to screw the pressed tin front panel on.
Minimal major assemblies, so they just fit together .... just getting the assembly order correct is the tricky bit .... sometimes requires the odd disassembly again to get the clearance to put a part in that looked as though it went in after, like unscrewing the sides from the base again because the big nylon pins that hold the shock absorbers to the base need to be driven in with a bar and hammer ... but most of it has been fun ... getting my foot tangled up between the base and drum because I was trying to hold it down while stretching the spring to clip it in place .... resulting in me biting the dust and skinning the knees, a chunk just above the ankle where the washing machine took a bit out as I spun around on my way down .. and both elbows because it wasn't a graceful landing


T1 Terry