It holds the bottom drain portion to the top. It leaks! As it was design to do clearly. Starcraft probably pocketed $2 extra dollars using that crappy part.Is the screw holding it together or a cold weather drain location?
It holds the bottom drain portion to the top. It leaks! As it was design to do clearly. Starcraft probably pocketed $2 extra dollars using that crappy part.Is the screw holding it together or a cold weather drain location?
My Starcraft Aframe is a 2016. I have a box full of extra screws and locktite handy. I find replacing things with quality marine grade equipment is a good path forward. Expensive but durable. I settled for being happy with the tires, wheels, axle, suspension and frame. I can fix all the rest. I guess if it was really quality we would pay up front…so we pay on the backend of the purchase. It’s enjoyable so long as it doesn’t catch on fire!Pretty much. We bring tools with us cause we know something will have fallen apart or off while driving down the highway. It is what it is. We've had this trailer for 4 seasons now. In the end, it does what we need it to do. As stuff breaks, we fix it.
It's a 2016 so pre-pandemic but it doesn't matter. From what I've read, anything (mass produced) since the 2008 recession is crap.
Yes, nobody should RV fulltime unless they are understand that the needs of the RV will often have to come before any other needs! Your furniture comment is spot on. We're building a trailer now that will have no furniture (we'll add our own), no cooktop (it's inexpensive portable units for us for now on), no built in microwave (a small portable will do it), and no Winegard or DirecTV equipment (hardwired stuff that just adds weight, wind drag, and is soon obsolete). All of that means you need to rely less on the installation expertise of the factory and can easily replace/upgrade items when you need to. Plus, it allows more flexibility with your limited space. It's the complete opposite approach when took when we built our first trailer and we thought we had to have everything we'd ever possibly need added up front by the factory.My wife and I have been full timing in a RV for the last 10 years but we don’t travel anywhere (yet) just use it as a home here at the Grand Canyon. We’re on our third trailer now first one was used, last 2 were new all have had issues.
After 10 years I have learned a lot about maintaining/repairing and surviving through cold winter weather in a RV. It’s not for the faint of heart or those who don’t have any mechanical skills.
We bought our current trailer in 2021, a 27’ Winnebago Voyage bumper pull. I used my 10+ years of RV education in selecting this particular trailer. I did a thorough PDI on it and found a couple small issues that were quick fixes but should have been caught by the service department and not me. I missed a couple small things that I found after getting it home that I took care of but all the big (expensive) things worked as they should. After a year of use we have had to replace one of the grey tank valves and the electric tongue jack is in the process of being replaced now. Considering that we don’t move our trailer why that broke is almost funny. The theater seating was a joke, the recliner on my seat broke after a couple months use but we were going to replace it anyway with something more comfortable and with better back support for me, all RV furniture is junk. One of the roll down window shades is stuck in the down position haven’t had time to see if it’s repairable or has to be replaced.
Like Treefarmer I got our trailer with the 12v fridge option instead of the electric/propane fridge seen to many fridge fires not to. Had to go to Colorado to get it since all the local dealers in Arizona had the wrong fridge in them, saved $10 grand on the price of the trailer also win win! Even with all the tribulations of full timing in a RV it’s been worth it.
If you continue to travel/camp the way you described, then you should definitely keep the Airstream and feel good about any time you have a chance to fix/upgrade something. If we were going to keep our trailer for another 10 years, we have a list of items we would replace/upgrade. It would be a lot smarter than buying something new. Our plan is to go smaller and more offroad, so it's a new trailer for us.The "Untold stories..." link paints a pretty grim picture. Add an oppressive working environment to all the other factors contributing to dismal quality and it's not surprising crap is being pumped out the door. We've gone back and forth about selling our 1971 23ft Airstream for something newer. To date, I've yet to find anything attractive enough from a design standpoint to motivate us to make the change and that's even aside from the quality issues plaguing the industry. Most of what I've seen that offer a step up in ruggedness, are getting heavier, taller and longer than our old Airstream. Then there's the cost, with some of that being driven by features that are not optional and we simply don't need for camping in the mountains or desert.
All of the commentary I've seen shared on this forum reinforces the idea of keeping what we have and dealing with problems as they come up. Given that what I have is a "known" vs the uncertainty of what would come with a pre-owned or new unit. As I'm not that mechanically inclined, I do have to rely on outside repair services for more problematic issues which, nowadays, entails long waits. While our trailer is 51 years old, it was gutted in 2004 by the previous owner and rebuilt with new (at the time) appliances. Aside from a few minor services on the frig, all of the appliances have worked flawlessly over the 17 years we've had it until this summer when the frig died. Unfortunately, Dometic no longer makes it, rebuilt units are unavailable, nor are parts. Also, no one makes a unit that is the exact same size. So, I finally found a similar capacity unit with acceptable critical dimensions of width and depth, but it's 9" taller. So, I need to have the cabinet that holds/secures it rebuilt and am in the process now of finding someone to do that. We've done a few upgrades to the trailer over the years including new axles, brakes, shocks, propane tanks with gauges. Since it's a 1971, it doesn't have a gray water tank, so we rely on dollies when not hooked up to sewer connections, which is most of the time, as we shy away from fancy campground unless there is no other choice like when down on the Oregon coast. Over the years, we've learned to not take this trailer too far down unpaved roads. At most, it's seen trips that involved 5 - 10 miles of very slow washboard and much shorter sections of dirt. That is likely the primary driver to our considering getting something new and more rugged. However, given the experience that is shared by so many others on this forum, it reinforces my belief that there are no easy solutions to that problem. Comparing the issues I've had over 17 years of ownership to what I've seen from owners of new and recently built RV's, makes me feel fortunate.
We had an F250 with 2 different FWC Grandby's for 20 years that was our go to backroad rig. However, I sold it the year prior to the Covid explosion. Have kicked myself more than once for that move. We have thought of picking up a smaller trailer for the rougher back roads and keeping the Airstream for the tamer stuff. In the past two years, a few options have surfaced in that category. Yet, from a cost/quality standpoint, I'm hesitant to go that route particularly if the manufacturer is located across the country. Anyway, all this discussion makes me feel grateful for what I already have and willing to put up with the quirks of our "vintage" rig.
We do intend to hang onto the Airstream for now. It's paid for and, even adding up all the money we've thrown at it over 17 years, it's still less $$ than anything remotely comparable in today's market. If anything, assuming we can find something to our liking, we'll add a smaller more rugged towable for farther down the back roads. Having owned both a truck/FWC platform and a trailer, we like the flexibility of dropping a towable off as a base camp while we explore. Always tradeoffs though.If you continue to travel/camp the way you described, then you should definitely keep the Airstream and feel good about any time you have a chance to fix/upgrade something. If we were going to keep our trailer for another 10 years, we have a list of items we would replace/upgrade. It would be a lot smarter than buying something new. Our plan is to go smaller and more offroad, so it's a new trailer for us.
Not all of them. If you want quality, at least in a Class A, purchase a Newell or a Prevost. And you don't have to be rich to get one - we purchased our gently used Newell for 8 cents on the dollar of the original price.All RVs are crap. Some just smell better than others. The sooner an "RV'er" understands that, the sooner they will learn to plan accordingly, roll with the punches, and get some enjoyment out of the lifestyle.
Those outlets are such a pita to reassemble. Especially when they jam three sets of wires in there.Or…if plumbing isn’t your thing how about the awful use of self-tapping outlets. I was swapping my outlets to ones with USB chargers. Nice crap outlets were used. Cut the ground wire in half and nearly clipped the conductors as well. As an electrical engineer I just wept and gamely replaced these latent fire starters.View attachment 749442View attachment 749443
You're right about the higher quality of the best Class A diesel pushers. However, they might not be the best off road option! ?Not all of them. If you want quality, at least in a Class A, purchase a Newell or a Prevost. And you don't have to be rich to get one - we purchased our gently used Newell for 8 cents on the dollar of the original price.