My granddaughter closed my slide the other day and the next time I tried to open it, all I got was the sound of teeth gnashing. Try as I may there was no information on how to manually open or close a slide. So began my education. I researched all 133 pages of this forum for any information and there was nothing useful. Next I watched 49 videos about slides and again zero...except for one and from it I learned there are a limited number of slide actuation types.
That video led me to power gear type and that was what my slide used. Now I knew how the slide worked, but there was no information on how to manually open or close.
I called three RV repair places in Knoxville yesterday and as of this writing, I am still waiting for a response. My wife and I wanted to take our, new to us, RV on a little trip overnight so we could become more familiar with this RVing experience and we had resigned ourselves to going with the slide not working.
Last night, I couldn't sleep worrying about how to fix this minor disaster that was beginning to reek of expensive. I had a dream that I disassembled the slide into a huge pile of parts and as I worried, in my dream, how I was ever going to put it back together...I woke up. Repeat that four more times, without the stupid dream, and finally at 6:00 I got up and started my research all over again...more than a little frustrated.
After a cup of coffee, I told myself that if I could fix complicated aircraft hydraulic systems, build motorcycle race engines to go 190 mph at Daytona with zero failures in thirty years, then I was going to fix this damn slide...TODAY!
I was reading a PDF file on power gear slides when I had an epiphany. I remembered that there was a strange looking plug on the side of outside of the slide and I knew instantly that was the access to the manual control. I hastily changed clothes and went outside, grabbed a screwdriver, a flashlight, and when I popped the cap off...hidden inside was a 3/4" nut. I retrieved my ratchet and a socket and turned the nut first one way and then the other. I heard a click and when I again turned the nut counter-clockwise, I felt the slide move. I turned the nut several more times and the slide moved outward.
I opened the cab door, reached inside, and as I reached for the slide switch, I knew that it would work. I did and the slide moved out and then it came back in and then I moved it back out so I could see when the drive mechanism was and how it was assembled.
I can't be the only lost soul with this problem, so here are the pictures of all the evil mechanics. I hope this helps another.
Slide out!
Hole holds the secret manual nut!
Left motor under slide.
Right motor under slide.
Hidden nut!