There are a few reasons why having on board air makes sense with a truck, truck camper, off road rig, etc. The biggest time suck is returning from dirt to pavement and having to air up 4 large tires and it takes FOREVER. We’ve been there. Airing up tire for an hour. With all 8 tires in the image below needing air, it took quite a bit of time.

Stuck In Arizona Mud

If this upgrade works, it’ll mean not ever choosing to air down for a more comfortable ride.  Now, we can deflate the tires more often for those bumpy, rocky, off road adventures. Is it a success? Watch and see.

2 Track Bumpy Trail

We had airbags when hauling this Lance camper on the same F350. We continued to use the same on board air compressor (mounted under the hood) to air up and down those air bags depending on the road condition.

Since then, we integrated Maximus onto the F350, removed those air bags and added an air horn to the truck. 

For us the primary need for on board air is tire inflation plus our air horn. Other trucks may also have air jacks or air bags like we did.

For this upgrade, Steve needed to think outside the box and devise a way to add extra capacity and redundancy. Then, he had to find a place in or on the truck to carry the system “on board.” Schematic can be downloaded by clicking the image below or visit our TechDocs Page for the download links.

Video

If you enjoy hitting the dirt but not your head on the roof liner, watch this and see how adding sufficient on board air can improve your off road bumpy adventures. Or add that air horn you’ve been wanting.



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