Saving Your Rear End
Here are two driving maneuvers you can easily use to prevent dragging.
Dragging the rear end of your motorhome, especially while flat-towing a car with the tow bar attached, is not good. This is a common way to cut or damage your safety cables. Plus the noise sounds like you are ripping apart the rear end of your coach. Learning driving maneuvers that will help keep you and your RV out of trouble is a worthwhile endeavor and may prevent you from hurting your coach.

These depressions usually become even worse over time due to repaving the street or parking lot. Sometimes the depression does not look too bad but a history of grooves or marks from hitches dragging through the pavement provides evidence that you, too, will likely drag. If possible, go around the block one time to take a closer look. We once entered a parking lot and were forced to exit onto a different street. It was nearly a disaster with its steep ramp going down to the street but was impossible to know this without actually driving by it.
Watch the car traffic entering and exiting. If you observe vehicles angled up or down, like the one in these photos, you, too, will likely drag. Even though they set lower to the ground than you, the distance from your coach’s rear wheels to the rear end of your RV may be 4-5 times longer than that of a car. Therefore, if you observe a car’s rear end dragging (or almost), it’s practically guaranteed that you will, especially in an RV.


We suggest two driving maneuvers you can easily use to help prevent dragging the hitch on the pavement. The trick is to maneuver the RV so that the hitch stays up in the air as far as possible above the pavement. This is easily accomplished with practice.
Here’s the first trick…
- Approach the depression as straight as possible. Position your coach perpendicular to the cross street. Keep your drive wheels pointing straight forward until both front wheels are down into the depression as far as possible—it’s easy to feel your wheels settle on the bottom of the depression. Then stop—completely stop with your foot on the brake.
- Turn your wheels as far as possible before moving the coach (no creeping while turning the wheels). If you find it difficult to turn the wheels, let off the brake for just a second.
- Then creep out slowly—dead slow—less than idle speed! (You can creep at less than idle speed by tapping the brakes as you ease out.)
The one major negative in doing this procedure is that you need lots of time and little cross traffic or lots of courage. You literally have to stick the front end of your coach out into the lane of cross traffic, then stop, then maneuver out very slowly. You will need ample time as this must be done slowly. A heavy flow of oncoming cross traffic will enhance the need for lots of courage!
Here’s the second trick…
If possible, enter and cross the depression at an angle to make the turn into traffic. Doing this creates the effect of the rear wheels entering the depression at different times—the same thing you accomplished in the first maneuver by turning the wheels at the correct time. If you have the space available, this is the easier of the two maneuvers.
However, the problem with this maneuver is that you have to keep your drive wheels absolutely straight while crossing the depression. This means that the egress must be wide enough to cross it at an angle (with wheels straight). Using this technique, you must have ample room in the parking lot to maneuver the RV so as to approach the egress while driving straight forward.
As we always suggest in our driving seminars, find an empty parking lot and practice these driving procedures before you have to use them. The classic church parking lot at 10:00 A.M. on a Tuesday morning is a great place to practice. Go to an empty mall or big vacant store lot to try these driving maneuvers. You always find yourself in a difficult driving situation by surprise. Rarely, if ever, does anyone drive their RV into a bad or questionable position on purpose. Therefore, you really need to know what to do and practice doing it at your leisure—not during your first emergency.
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(This, and about 500 more excellent suggestions, are yours in “All the Stuff You Need to Know About RVing” (ISBN 156870514-X) by Ronald Jones and Robert Lowe. Order at www.rvstuff.org.
Also available... "Wrinkle-Free RV Laundry" and "The Wal-Mart Locator")
Also available... "Wrinkle-Free RV Laundry" and "The Wal-Mart Locator")
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