Up until now I have not carried anything to go under a low wheel but will look for something now. I have just used the four legs to try and level up.
Agree setting the outside is relatively quick, now that I have greased the legs, the beds take the longest inside. I think it takes around the same time, if not quicker, than a good sized tent to get settled.
To level the caravan side to side you should buy a ramp from a caravan shop. They are not expensive.
To level your van - You do this whilst the caravan is still attached to the car. Put the van where you want it. Put the ramp under the lower wheel then drive forward slightly until caravan is level.
Then everything else people have suggested.
Discounted Insurance Quotes for UKCampsite.co.uk visitors! Up to 12.5% off!
Quote: Originally posted by Outfortheweekend on 04/7/2017
Up until now I have not carried anything to go under a low wheel but will look for something now. I have just used the four legs to try and level up.
Every day is a learning day
The legs are just for steadying the van once it's level in both directions. If you use them to try and lift the van up on one side to level it it, will put an excessive amount of strain on the floor and bodywork as they aren't attached to the chassis.
Dave.
------------- Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day,
Teach a man to fish and you can get rid of him for a whole weekend.
It's best to call them steadies rather than legs or jacks because that's what they should be used for.
My leveling ramp looks like one of these. Ramp. I'm a bit vague because I think I paid a couple of quid at a carboot. I still have the wooden ramp that my dad made about 45 years ago out of scrap wood. Other people use pieces of scaffold board It's a case of whatever works for you. Sometimes I pull onto a ramp and sometimes I back on that doesn't make any difference anyway.
We do a lot of rallies on fields so levelling is the norm we have got to the stage where we can almost level the van without thinking it's just practise. It doesn't make you perfect it does make you quicker.
Of course, it's frequently impossible to keep the van hitched to level it.
Many pitches, especially on the continent, require unhitching and then moving the van into position, either by hand or with a mover ...
Winding steadies down is easier using a battery powered drill ... set to the right output. it'll wind down the steadies and do the 'extra half a turn' automatically.