Thanks to everyone's comments and suggestions, I replaced the leaky hydraulic hose without any major incidents.
I did crib the frame up front. I used the LevelUp system (don't tell the LCI lawyers) to raise the front, placed the blocks, and then lowered the RV back down onto them. I was replacing the "Retract" hose, so after lowering the rig onto the blocks, I bumped the "Extend" button to try to equalize some of the pressure.
Being concerned about fluid spewing out when I removed the hose from the jack, I had my JIC37 1/4" cap at the ready. I also had a matching plug for the hose. I had it backwards. The jack didn't emit any fluid, but the hose drained out about a 1/2 cup or so. Lots of rags were placed in the area before I started, so not too much of a mess. But next time, have the plug for the hose ready first.
I have heard that Napa makes hydraulic hoses. Not so true, at least in the Sacramento area. There are seven Napas around me and not a one does it. I wound up using a hydraulic shop on the opposite side of town from me. They made up a 4' hose with two fitting in just 5 minutes and I was a walk-in. The $70 seemed pricey but everything today seems to be.
__________________
Carl (n Susan)
There is more to life than fuel mileage.
2012 Montana 3700RL Big Sky Package towed by a 2015 Ford F350 6.7L PSD 4WD CC LWB
|