Gene,
Thanks for the analysis of road rutting. I first experienced this driving
through Minnesota on a section of road traveled by heavy trucks --- must
have been a long section of poor road base. Anyway my wife almost got
seasick before I figured out what was going on and switched to the passing
lanes where rutting was not bad. Understanding the cause of the problem,
ie, different track of front vs rear wheels makes sense to me as to the
cause. To me it is not such a problem that I would chance any modifications
to my coach in an attempt to "fix" it.
Gary '77 Kingsley, Oregon.
> -- [ From: Eugene Fisher * EMC.Ver #2.5.3 ] --
>
> I have been collecting information on this problem for some time, and I
> think the following describes what I have read.
>
> GMC Rut Runners
>
> The GMC jumps in and out of ruts in the road because the front wheels do
> not run in the same track as the rear wheels. This is an original
> design constraint of the GMC. Slack or looseness in the front
> suspension, steering and rear suspension aggravates this condition.
> Tires can also affect this condition.
>
> Extended wheels can correct the tracking. Machining a hub-centered
> adaptor for these wheels is needed because extended wheels available are
> not hub-centered but hang from the stud bolts. The load of the GMC
> wears these bolt holes and causes other problems. The extended wheels
> have been calculated to increase the loading on the hubs and bearings(
> already at maximum ) by 450% ! An interesting article in the GMC
> Motorhome News (September 1998) by Chuck Aulgur, Mechanical engineer,
> describes the technical aspects of this mounting. The results are not in
> at this time if this will significantly reduce the life of the front
> bearings, Hubs, etc. Users of these wheels say this eliminates the rut
> running.
>
> Four bagger modifications change the side to side roll stability of the
> GMC but do almost nothing for the tracking problem. The four baggers in
> essence remove the bogie action on the GMC and convert them into four
> independent wheels.
>
> My coach will jump ruts on a heavily rutted road. But it drives
> beautify and much better than the 30-foot SOB I rented several years ago
> .
>
>
> gene
Thanks for the analysis of road rutting. I first experienced this driving
through Minnesota on a section of road traveled by heavy trucks --- must
have been a long section of poor road base. Anyway my wife almost got
seasick before I figured out what was going on and switched to the passing
lanes where rutting was not bad. Understanding the cause of the problem,
ie, different track of front vs rear wheels makes sense to me as to the
cause. To me it is not such a problem that I would chance any modifications
to my coach in an attempt to "fix" it.
Gary '77 Kingsley, Oregon.
> -- [ From: Eugene Fisher * EMC.Ver #2.5.3 ] --
>
> I have been collecting information on this problem for some time, and I
> think the following describes what I have read.
>
> GMC Rut Runners
>
> The GMC jumps in and out of ruts in the road because the front wheels do
> not run in the same track as the rear wheels. This is an original
> design constraint of the GMC. Slack or looseness in the front
> suspension, steering and rear suspension aggravates this condition.
> Tires can also affect this condition.
>
> Extended wheels can correct the tracking. Machining a hub-centered
> adaptor for these wheels is needed because extended wheels available are
> not hub-centered but hang from the stud bolts. The load of the GMC
> wears these bolt holes and causes other problems. The extended wheels
> have been calculated to increase the loading on the hubs and bearings(
> already at maximum ) by 450% ! An interesting article in the GMC
> Motorhome News (September 1998) by Chuck Aulgur, Mechanical engineer,
> describes the technical aspects of this mounting. The results are not in
> at this time if this will significantly reduce the life of the front
> bearings, Hubs, etc. Users of these wheels say this eliminates the rut
> running.
>
> Four bagger modifications change the side to side roll stability of the
> GMC but do almost nothing for the tracking problem. The four baggers in
> essence remove the bogie action on the GMC and convert them into four
> independent wheels.
>
> My coach will jump ruts on a heavily rutted road. But it drives
> beautify and much better than the 30-foot SOB I rented several years ago
> .
>
>
> gene