I have a 1970 24x60 double wide trailer at the colorado river. I contracted to a company to level the trailer because the top center has about a 3/4" gap on one of the ends. He informed me that it was level, and they just added piers to support the old rusty ones. There were no marks on the bolts or threads of the old ones, indicating there was absolutely 0 adjustment. I haven't rigged up a bucket level to verify, but I suspect that they just supported the trailer at its existing height. He said that leveling the trailer will not bring the top pieces together.
Is that correct? It doesn't sit right, but I'm not a mobile home expert.
I assumed they would adjust the tie down straps, but some of them have a good 2+ inches of slack, and none of those were adjusted either.
Some of the pads the piers are on have huge gaps directly under them. the worst is probably close to 2". You can almost slide a brick under it. I know this is wrong.
They also said they would paint the roof and scrape off all the old flaky paint. They didn't even do the edges.
Check out a bunch of pictures here. https://goo.gl/photos/xFep2y91ui9zhaWf9
We haven't paid anything yet, but I wanted to see what some of you think I should do. It's out in Arizona and blazing hot now. We started this project in May when it was nice. It's 115-120+ out there now.
I can't remember the exact prices, but I think it was $1200 to paint the roof, and $2700 to level it. This is a company that does mobile home leveling and modifications, not some random guy. We were going to have him do additional work, but after I saw the quality I put the brakes on.
Let me know what you think I should do. I thought paying for the roof, and the material cost of the new piers would be fair.
Is that correct? It doesn't sit right, but I'm not a mobile home expert.
I assumed they would adjust the tie down straps, but some of them have a good 2+ inches of slack, and none of those were adjusted either.
Some of the pads the piers are on have huge gaps directly under them. the worst is probably close to 2". You can almost slide a brick under it. I know this is wrong.
They also said they would paint the roof and scrape off all the old flaky paint. They didn't even do the edges.
Check out a bunch of pictures here. https://goo.gl/photos/xFep2y91ui9zhaWf9
We haven't paid anything yet, but I wanted to see what some of you think I should do. It's out in Arizona and blazing hot now. We started this project in May when it was nice. It's 115-120+ out there now.
I can't remember the exact prices, but I think it was $1200 to paint the roof, and $2700 to level it. This is a company that does mobile home leveling and modifications, not some random guy. We were going to have him do additional work, but after I saw the quality I put the brakes on.
Let me know what you think I should do. I thought paying for the roof, and the material cost of the new piers would be fair.

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