things a vendor or traveler may need

blues_n_cues

is Blowin Smoke!
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other than the usual cooking stuff.....

tool box
electrical & ducttape(stickgum-foil or wrapper works great for short fuse fix)
trailer or pull pit guys---

fixaflat
good spare
portable air tank
road flares
2.5-5 ton floor jack
12v candle watt spot or snakelight
4x4 woodblocks(changing flats or jacking)

anything else ya think of please add..
 
Swiss Army knife and duct tape (no I'm not making a McGyver joke)
 
Key for the locking wheel nut.
 
Trailer spares:
Tail lamp bulb
Auto fuses
Electric panel breaker
Drain pipe cap
Hidden set of extra keys!
 
tool box
electrical & ducttape(stickgum-foil or wrapper works great for short fuse fix)
trailer or pull pit guys---

fixaflat
good spare
portable air tank
road flares
2.5-5 ton floor jack
12v candle watt spot or snakelight
4x4 woodblocks(changing flats or jacking)

anything else ya think of please add..

We borrowed a trailer on a couple of occasions from another Scout troop for extended trips. It had the things you and others mentioned, but instead of the portable air tank, they had a 12V Coleman compressor/air pump with extra cord to reach the trailer wheels. Everything was stowed in a tool box that stayed with the trailer, and had a printed inventory that had to be checked before leaving and upon return.

In the toolbox was: A small can of PB Blaster, a small tube of grease, a set of trailer wheel bearings, and whatever tools necessary to change the bearings. Even if you don't change the bearings yourself, you have a set on Sunday afternoon when you're broken down 22 miles south of nowhere. There was also a plugging kit for punctures in a tire sidewall to at least try to limp home.

There was also a Mini Mag light, spare bulbs, fuses, a strip of emery cloth, spare electrical connectors for both trailer and towing vehicle, needle nosed pliers with wire cutter, red tape, (for emergency to cover broken tail light lens) a small roll of electrical tape, and a few pieces of heat shrink tubing.

A good pair of leather gloves, some nitrile gloves, a poncho, a tube of waterless hand cleaner, shop rags, and a gardeners kneeling pad. A very basic first aid kit, a spare padlock and keys. One of those LED lights that clips on the bill of a cap is handy when you need both hands and can't hold the light.

Fortunately, we never needed to use any of it, and hope you never do either.

Chris
 
if hauling trailer wouldnt leave without a extra hub and set of bearings... and would make sure the bearings had been packed within the last year or 10.000 miles witch ever comes first per mfg.in a previous life worked on rvs for a living. and we all know what rv stands for (ruined vacation):shock: so ounce of previntions worth the pound of cure.just my 2 cents
 
My left index finger is now 1/16 shorter thanks to a very sharp brisket knife.
Duct tape only stops some of the bleeding. :roll:
Watch it, some body's gonna go Wendy's Mod on you and own all 15 of your drums.





Where's my lawyer???:twisted:
 
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