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Retired Electrician Warns: The 'Just Call A Mobile Tech' Culture Is Costing Full-Time RVers Thousands


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By John Patterson — Retired Master Electrician (IBEW Local 613) & Full-Time RVer

Three hundred and twenty-five dollars an hour for a mobile RV tech.

A six-week wait at the nearest shop.

A 13mm bolt under our coach I could see, I could touch, and I could not turn.

We sold everything we owned and moved into a motorhome at sixty-four years old. Four months in, one bolt almost ended it.

Hi. My name is John Patterson. I'm sixty-four. My wife Susan is sixty-one. I spent thirty-seven years as a union electrician with IBEW Local 613 out of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Commercial wiring, data centers, hospital retrofits. The kind of work where you run conduit through crawlspaces that don't exist yet. My back retired before I did. I took the early package last year. Susan retired from Erlanger Hospital the same month — twenty-four years in medical records.

The night I told Susan I wanted to sell the house, she put her fork down and didn't pick it up again until she said okay. She'd grown up in that neighborhood. We raised two boys on that block. It wasn't a small thing. She took six months to say okay out loud. I didn't rush her.

By Two Weeks In, Susan Was Calling It Home

We bought a 2017 Thor Windsport 29M. Ford F53 chassis. Sold the house on Shallowford Road to a young couple who needed it more than we did. Pulled out of Chattanooga in November with a Honda CRV on a tow dolly and a six-month plan that already felt too short.

By January we were west of Yuma at a BLM long-term visitor area called Imperial Dam. Snowbirds for miles. Saguaros in every direction. Susan had a line of solar lights staked along the edge of our site and a wicker rocker in the sun, and she told me one afternoon that for the first time in thirty years, she didn't have anywhere she needed to be.

Two Weeks In, The Onan 5500 Quit

If you full-time you know what that means. The generator runs everything when the hookups are sixty miles away. Lights. Air conditioning. The electric heater that keeps Susan warm when the desert falls to thirty-four degrees at three in the morning. The microwave. The CPAP machine she's needed every night for nine years.

When the generator doesn't start, you're on house batteries. House batteries last about as long as your marriage gets if you try to make one pot of coffee without waking your wife up.

I've worked with generators my whole career. I crawled under the coach with a headlamp and had it diagnosed in twelve minutes. The fuel pump mounting bolt — a 13mm — had vibrated loose after nine years of highway. The pump shifted on its bracket and kinked the fuel line just enough to starve the carb.

A problem with a thirty-second fix.

Thirty-second fix if the bolt was anywhere else.

The fuel pump sits on top of the generator housing between the frame rails under the coach. The bolt head is an inch and three-eighths from the underbelly pan. I could see the bolt. I could get one finger on it. But you cannot fit a ratchet in that gap and swing it. Not a standard 3/8. Not a 1/4. Not a stubby. Not anything I had in thirty-seven years of electrician tools and twenty-five years of RV tools.

Here's What Nobody Tells You About The Bolts Under A Motorhome

The basic ratchet wrench was patented by J.J. Richardson in 1863 — during the Civil War. The flex-head version came along in 1967, the year of the first Super Bowl. In the 159 years since Richardson, the hinge that folds on your three-hundred-dollar Snap-on today is the same hinge geometry that's been failing under torque since Lincoln was in office.

Chrome changed. Price changed. The hinge didn't.

Snap-on charges three hundred. Matco charges two seventy. Both fold at the same forty foot-pounds.

Modern motorhome chassis weren't built for that geometry.

The Ford F53 chassis under our Windsport, the Freightliner under your Ventana, the Spartan under your Newmar — they all package generators, fuel systems, and leveling jacks into the gap between the frame rails and the underbelly pan. Most factories assemble those bolts on a robotic line in Wakarusa or Goshen with a custom spindle no one outside the plant will ever own.

After the coach rolls off the line, you're on your own. The dealer's tech doesn't have a tool that fits either. He has the same flex ratchet sitting in his roller cabinet that you have. He just has a price list to charge you for what neither of you can do.

What I tried that night under the coach — and why none of it worked:

  • Minute one — Stubby ratchet: Six degrees of swing before the handle hit the underbelly pan. Useless on a bolt that's been shaken loose but not out.
  • Minute ten — Craftsman flex-head: First pull, the head folded. Second pull, the socket walked. Third pull I took a chunk of skin off my knuckle on the frame crossmember.
  • Minute twenty — Universal joint on a long extension: Deflected sideways like it was made of licorice. The socket twisted off the hex and dropped into the sand. I found it 15 minutes later with a telescoping magnet.
  • Minute forty-five — Wobble socket: Gave me the angle and took away my torque. On a bolt packed with nine years of diesel soot, you don't need angle. You need torque.
  • Minute sixty — I crawled out and sat on the rug Susan had put on the ground outside our door.

Susan came out with a wool blanket and a cup of coffee she'd brewed on the propane. She didn't ask how it was going. She could see me. She sat down next to me on the rug, put the blanket over my shoulders, and said:

"We have propane. We have batteries. We have each other. We will figure it out."

She's said that every single time something has gone wrong since Shallowford Road. She's been right every time.

But sitting on a BLM rug in the Arizona desert with blood drying on my knuckles and a bolt under our coach I couldn't turn — I wasn't sure she was right this time.

The Math I Ran At Ten At Night

I called a mobile RV tech in Yuma the next morning. Three hundred and twenty-five dollars an hour, plus a one-hundred-fifty-dollar trip fee. First available on Friday. Three more nights on batteries. No heat. No CPAP.

I called the nearest shop. Six-week wait. Two hundred dollars an hour.

If we didn't fix this, the math kept getting uglier:

What this one bolt was actually going to cost us:

  • Three more nights of propane to keep Susan warm in the desert cold: about $140
  • CPAP off batteries: a question her doctor in Chattanooga had been very specific about not wanting answered
  • If the mobile tech couldn't solve it (because they have the same tools we do): a flatbed from Yuma to a dealer that could keep the rig for weeks
  • If a dealer couldn't source parts for a 9-year-old Onan: I'm explaining to my two boys in Tennessee why their mom and I were flying back to live with them while we figured out what to do with a 34-foot motorhome we couldn't move

That's the math you don't run when you sell the house. That's the math you run on a BLM rug at ten at night.

Then Danny Richter Walked Over From Two Sites East

Danny is sixty-nine. Retired Georgia state trooper. Twenty-eight years on the highway patrol out of Macon. He and his wife Arlene have been full-timing in a 2019 Newmar Ventana for eleven years. Danny does all his own work — engine, chassis, generator, plumbing, roof. Everything.

He'd heard me cursing under the coach the night before and came by to see if I needed a hand.

I told him what it was. He got down on his back on his own rug, looked into the gap, looked at the bolt, and nodded once. He walked back to his rig and came back carrying something I'd never seen anybody use in forty years of working with hand tools.

An offset extension wrench. Solid steel bar about fourteen inches long. A fixed-angle bend in the middle. Square drives on both ends. Danny set it into my palm and said:

"Feel this."

I ran my finger along the bend. Inside the bar, something moved.

Not a universal joint. Not a flex coupling. A roller chain. An actual chain drive that transferred torque through the angle with no deflection whatsoever. I've spent my career pulling wire through conduit and I know what a chain drive does when you can't push force through a straight line. I just hadn't expected to find one inside a hand tool.

I slid it into the gap between the generator housing and the underbelly pan. The inch-and-three-eighths where every tool I owned had failed.

The socket seated on the 13mm bolt head flush. No rock. No wobble.

Danny put a quarter-inch ratchet on the drive end and told me to pull.

The bolt seated on the second pull. Nine years of vibration, and it torqued back into place like it had just needed the right angle and real torque.

I straightened the fuel line, checked the clamp, crawled out, and hit the start switch on the control panel.

The Onan fired on the second crank.

Susan was inside making breakfast on the propane stove. She heard it start, opened the door, and looked at me the way she'd looked at me the day we signed the papers on the Windsport.

Like maybe this had been the right call after all.

See If The Chain Drive Bar Is Still In Stock → $89

Direct from maker · Free US shipping · 30-day money back

Why Every Flex Tool Fails On The Bolts That Matter

Every flex-head ratchet, every universal joint, every wobble socket has one thing in common: a hinge between your hand and the bolt.

The moment you load torque, the hinge bends. The socket goes off-axis. Off-axis means the corners of the hex carry the load instead of the flats. Corners round. Then the socket walks. Then the bolt strips. Then you're reaching for vise grips at midnight in the Arizona desert — and that's when studs break flush with the head.

The chain drive doesn't have a hinge. It has a sealed roller chain inside a steel housing that transmits rotational force around a fixed-angle bend with zero deflection — not at sixty foot-pounds, not at a hundred. The socket sits flat on the bolt. The flats of the hex carry the load. Bolts come free. Hexes don't round.

It's the same principle that lets a bicycle chain transmit a hundred and fifty foot-pounds of pedal torque to the rear wheel without slipping a tooth. Just shrunk down and put inside a hand tool.

4.9
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Based on 1,247 verified RVer reviews

Don't Take My Word For It — Read What Real RVers Say

All reviews verified by purchase. Photos optional.

Mike R.

★★★★★ March 22, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

First pull. Bolt was free.

Used it on a leveling jack bolt that had been rattling from Mobile to Tucson. First pull, broke it free. Second pull I had it torqued back to spec. I keep mine in the basement compartment now.

47 people found this helpful

Linda H.

★★★★★ March 18, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

Three years of mobile techs telling me they couldn't reach it.

Onan 5500 fuel pump bolt. Three different mobile techs in three states all said they couldn't get a tool in there. Bar got it on the second pull. I cried in the basement compartment. My husband thought something was wrong.

62 people found this helpful

Tom B.

★★★★★ March 11, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

Saved me a $600 slide-out drop.

Bracket bolt under the slide-out mechanism on my Allegro that I'd been avoiding for fourteen months. Done in under a minute. The dealer wanted $600 to drop the slide. The bar paid for itself seven times over before I got back to the campsite.

39 people found this helpful

Arlene R.

★★★★★ March 4, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

Husband bought it for his bike. I keep stealing it.

Husband bought it for his Harley. I borrowed it for the propane regulator under our Class C. Then for a holding tank bolt. Then for the awning bracket. Now there are two in the basement compartment. He hides his.

28 people found this helpful

Greg P.

★★★★★ February 27, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

First new tool in 20 years that actually changes the job.

I've owned every Snap-on flex ratchet they make. Matco. Husky. SK. They all do the same thing — they fold when you load them. This bar doesn't fold because there's no hinge to fold. Best $89 I've spent on a hand tool in the last decade.

84 people found this helpful

Carol & Jim S.

★★★★★ February 19, 2026 ✓ Verified Purchase

Got the PRO. The case is worth the upgrade.

We got the PRO version because we're full-time and the case keeps it from getting buried at the bottom of the bin. Used it on the leveling jack first weekend out. Used it twice on a buddy's Ventana the next week. Lifetime warranty is the cherry.

31 people found this helpful

These Wrenches Have Saved Thousands of RV Trips — Don't Wait Until You're The One Stuck

I'm confident this tool is going to change how you wrench on your rig. No more sitting on a BLM rug at midnight. No more $325/hr mobile tech quotes. No more wondering if selling the house was the worst decision of your life.

But here's the catch — the maker only sells direct. They don't list on Amazon. They don't sell wholesale to Camping World. The chain drive bar gets shipped from a single US warehouse, and stock is limited to what they can manufacture each month.

Get Yours Now → $89 (Free Shipping)

Free shipping · 30-day money back · Ships from US warehouse

How Can You Get Your Hands On The Chain Drive Bar?

...And how much does it actually cost?

The maker sells direct from their site only. Not on Amazon. Not at Camping World. Not at Home Depot. The bars on Amazon look identical from the outside but use universal joints inside instead of the chain drive — same nineteenth-century geometry repackaged for $20 less.

Standard: $89. Free US shipping. Includes a free LED worklight this week.

PRO: $129. Adds a fitted hard case for the basement compartment, a four-piece SAE/metric adapter set, and a lifetime replacement warranty.

Compared to a single mobile RV tech visit at $325/hour with a $150 trip fee, the standard pays for itself the first time you use it. The PRO pays for itself the second time.

Demand is at an all-time high. The maker has had to delay shipments twice this year already because of the rate full-timers are buying. If you're seeing this page, the bar is in stock right now. Lock in your order before the next batch sells out.

30 Days To Test The Wrench Under Your Own Rig — Completely Risk-Free

YES — you read that right.

Order the bar today. Use it on the bolt under your generator that's been giving you trouble. Use it on the leveling jack bolt rattling on every expansion joint. Use it on the exhaust bracket bolt you've been avoiding for a year. Use it for 30 days, no questions.

If the chain drive doesn't break the bolt free on the first or second pull — if it doesn't fit the gap under your specific rig — if it doesn't do what Danny told me it would do for me at the BLM site east of Yuma — send it back for a full refund. The maker covers the return shipping. No restocking fee. No fine print.

You, your rig, and your money are protected.

Here's Exactly What To Do Next

1. Click the button below to go to the order page.

2. Choose Standard ($89) or PRO ($129 with case + lifetime warranty). Most full-timers I know go with the PRO because they want the case in the basement compartment, but the standard works exactly the same.

3. Add to cart. Check out. Done.

The bar ships from a US warehouse within one business day. General delivery to a Yuma, Quartzsite, or Pahrump post office works fine — that's how I got mine in three days.

Remember — There's ZERO Risk For You

I'll be honest with you. I'm not writing this to scare you. I'm writing this because I sat on a BLM rug at ten at night with blood on my knuckles and a bolt I couldn't turn, and I wouldn't wish that night on anybody.

What you have to ask yourself is — what happens the next time something rattles loose under your coach? Not in your driveway. Out in the desert. On the Blue Ridge Parkway. In a Walmart parking lot in Pahrump at one in the morning. What happens then?

You can pay $325 an hour to a mobile tech who shows up Friday. You can wait six weeks at a shop while you sit on batteries. You can flatbed it to a dealer for $1,300. Or you can have an $89 bar in your basement compartment that does the job before sundown.

This is one of those decisions you only have to make once. Are you going to say NO and hope nothing else rattles loose? Or are you going to spend $89 and never think about this problem again?

Comments (5)

RVer_Dave 47 minutes ago

Just ordered the PRO. Wish I'd known about this before my last $1,200 dealer bill.

👍 14 Reply

Bessie K. 2 hours ago

Reading this in our Newmar at Quartzsite. About to walk over and ask Danny if he's still here. 😂

👍 23 Reply

Richard M. 5 hours ago

Bought one in November. Used it 8 times since. Finally fixed the leveling jack that's been driving us crazy since we left Maine.

👍 9 Reply

Sandi & Bob yesterday

Good honest write-up John. Not a sales pitch. We're going to grab the PRO before we head south next month.

👍 18 Reply

FullTimeFloyd 2 days ago

I had basically the same experience but with a Cummins Onan in the Sierra. Wish I'd had this bar then. Ordered.

👍 11 Reply

Finally Stop Wondering If Your Tools Will Reach The Bolt That Matters

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The story above is based on a real field repair conducted in January 2026 at the Imperial Dam BLM long-term visitor area near Yuma, Arizona. Results vary depending on bolt condition, fastener type, and the specific gap geometry of your rig. The chain drive bar is a hand tool — not a magic solution. SavaryTool makes no medical, safety, or warranty claims beyond the 30-day money-back guarantee and lifetime replacement warranty (PRO version only). All testimonials are from verified purchasers but individual experience may differ. Consult a qualified RV technician for serious chassis or engine work.

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