TravelTiger
Founding Texas-West Chapter Leaders-Retired
Just wanted to post our experience, I'm not make my a judgement here because I don't really know. Hoping to get feedback from other's experiences.
Last summer (June 2017) we had MorRyde put on the SRE4000 suspension, heavy duty shackles and wet bolts, along with Bilstein shocks. We traveled from Elkhart to Nashville and found one shock had failed, and others may be leaking. Replaced the one, got home to Texas and replaced all shocks with Generic trailer shocks. Since then we've only traveled a few short one hour trips, until heading again from Texas to Elkhart for an appointment with Heartland last week (June 2018).
All that to say, on the return trip from Elkhart, Tony noticed the trailer tracking strangely and pulled over to find the wet bolt for the rear spring was gone, along with the yellow CorrecTrack Cams. He was able to put in a bolt to continue the journey, but 200 miles later the other failed as well, luckily as he arrived at a campground. In both cases, lots of grease remained at the scene, so we believe they both failed similarly, at the grease port, and split in the middle. See pic.
To answer questions,
-Trailer is 2016 Big Country 4010RD, very unloaded for its trip to Elkhart
-Yes we checked the torque before travel
-No we had not added grease yet
-Failure at about 4000 miles since install
-No other evidence of a problem, spring stayed in line with hanger when it failed.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Last summer (June 2017) we had MorRyde put on the SRE4000 suspension, heavy duty shackles and wet bolts, along with Bilstein shocks. We traveled from Elkhart to Nashville and found one shock had failed, and others may be leaking. Replaced the one, got home to Texas and replaced all shocks with Generic trailer shocks. Since then we've only traveled a few short one hour trips, until heading again from Texas to Elkhart for an appointment with Heartland last week (June 2018).
All that to say, on the return trip from Elkhart, Tony noticed the trailer tracking strangely and pulled over to find the wet bolt for the rear spring was gone, along with the yellow CorrecTrack Cams. He was able to put in a bolt to continue the journey, but 200 miles later the other failed as well, luckily as he arrived at a campground. In both cases, lots of grease remained at the scene, so we believe they both failed similarly, at the grease port, and split in the middle. See pic.
To answer questions,
-Trailer is 2016 Big Country 4010RD, very unloaded for its trip to Elkhart
-Yes we checked the torque before travel
-No we had not added grease yet
-Failure at about 4000 miles since install
-No other evidence of a problem, spring stayed in line with hanger when it failed.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk