Caravan jack
what type of jack do you use for the caravan when you have a puncture ?
where do you jack up the caravan is it the axle or the chassis
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A few points to consider before spending any money -
1) How often do caravan tyres get punctures?
2) If you did get an offside puncture whilst towing on a motorway or dual carriageway would you attempt to change it?
3) Are you a member of a breakdown service?
I actually do carry a small bottle jack for changing a caravan tyre but could only ever see me using in on a site or at our storage. Every other situation I would almost certainly ring the breakdown service.
My life is too important to take any risk.
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I've got a small trolley jack and have been told to jack on the axle. My service engineer told me under no circumstances jack on the chassis as it will buckle it. The only exception is if you have the Alko or Kojak which have brackets fitted to the chassis.
Mike
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Bearing in mind that a car is usually heavier than the caravan I use the car's scissor jack
Jack up on the chassis which, if ALCO, would likely have suitable jacking points built in, as it does in my case. Your handbook should advise on this if you have it.
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You might find this thread useful, Armourer.
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I never had to change a wheel on mine but when jacking it up I used a bottle jack and a block of wood against the clamping plate of the motor mover assembly. The wood block reduces the risk of anything sliding about.
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I carry a light weight low entry 2 tonne trolley jack.
Have jacked up on the Alko open ended jack, scary and worrying that this is supplied. When I removed the jacking brackets one had started to fold, again worrying.
Tried the carajak, marked improvement on the ALKO but not as stable as I would like.
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I use the Kojak jack , especially for jacking up the van in winter to spin the wheels. Much better than the Alko jack, where the chassis components bent.
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When jacking a car one wheel out of four is normally lifted, for a caravan half the weight is lifted. Check the jack capacity before use and ensure the jack will not slip. Remember a trolley jack needs to move on it’s wheels or the caravan must move.
Regards,
Ray.
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One issue to be aware of with a caravan with a flat tyre is the small clearance available to place the jack under the axle mount/jacking point. whatever jack you chose, make sure it is 'low' enough - most cheap trolley jacks and bottle jacks wont go under the axle if the tyre is flat. They are also quite heavy t carry permamently. I bought
it has a flat rubber top plate and can be operated by my power drill with the landing legs attachment (or the manual handle) as well as the 'ratchet spanner' handle it came with.
It does lift the caravan on the drive quite stably although (touch wood) I haven't had a flat tyre to test it 'in the field'.
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