Slideout Awning Woes -
whited44 - 12-30-2024
Hi Everyone. I picked my coach up in October. It has 1 driver side slide. On the trip back from picking it up the slide out awning went in and out with the slide as it's supposed to. The last stop before home I ran the slide out like I have before and it broke the aluminum castings that hold the roller tube. I took the slide awning off so that I could get home. Well I finally got the parts from Zip Dee. Put everything back together per their instructions and watching the YouTube video that AZ rv expert did on replacing one (see below video)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yO8Iuj7ReKA
So long story short. I went to put the slide out and watch the slide awning go out like it was supposed to and it got almost all the way out and 1 of the castings broke again. Zip Dee is closed for the holiday but just wondered it anyone else had any problems like this?? The spring is original but seem like it wound nicely.
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
Richard - 12-30-2024
Yes,
Look at the two standoffs for the arms. Add a 1/8 shim to the standoffs. The awning fabric is catching on the upper edge of the slide out and jamming the roller.
Easy fix.
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
whited44 - 12-30-2024
(12-30-2024, 01:22 PM)Richard Wrote: Yes,
Look at the two standoffs for the arms. Add a 1/8 shim to the standoffs. The awning fabric is catching on the upper edge of the slide out and jamming the roller.
Easy fix.
So you're saying the fabric is rubbing on the top of the slide while it comes out?? Causing it to catch hence ripping the casting heads off???
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
Richard - 12-30-2024
It has happened a number of times to me. The fabric presses up against the vertical wall of the slide out at the top of the slide. It is not rubbing on the ceiling of the slide.
I am assuming you released the hook catch of course.
The other thing that can happen is if the tension is not high enough the lip on the stainless zip dee cover will droop and catch going out or coming in.
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
whited44 - 12-30-2024
(12-30-2024, 02:08 PM)Richard Wrote: It has happened a number of times to me. The fabric presses up against the vertical wall of the slide out at the top of the slide. It is not rubbing on the ceiling of the slide.
I am assuming you released the hook catch of course.
The other thing that can happen is if the tension is not high enough the lip on the stainless zip dee cover will droop and catch going out or coming in.
I can definitely see that happening.. and I’m leaning toward this is my problem.
The lock is gone, it was ripped off prior to me.
I don’t think the layer is the problem because i put 18 turns on it like the zip dee manual says and I wouldn’t think this would only be problematic at first coming out not almost all the way out
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
Richard - 12-30-2024
Well it gets tighter the further out it is.
And oh yeah, to the best of my corrupted memory chip, I have 25 turns in it. I think the spring may have weakened with time, just like me.
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
whited44 - 12-30-2024
(12-30-2024, 04:46 PM)Richard Wrote: Well it gets tighter the further out it is.
And oh yeah, to the best of my corrupted memory chip, I have 25 turns in it. I think the spring may have weakened with time, just like me.
I’m gonna try to put some paint sticks or something behind the arms after I put it together again. See if that helps keep it away from the side of the slide
RE: Slideout Awning Woes -
arcticdude - 12-31-2024
Airstreams use the same awning parts. I found much less expensive ZipDee parts at an Airstream dealer in North Carolina, iirc. I had to replace both heads on my bedroom slide topper when one broke. The other got heavily stressed from the twisting the awning tube did when the first head broke.
You might try your local Airstream dealer, if you have one. They should have this part, though the local one to me when mine broke did not have it.