GroupSe7en
Adventurer
Just ebayed a 2005 Starcraft 10RT.
Bought it for a trip with the family across Newfoundland and Labrador. I think that by the time I get to the end of the Trans Labrador Highway, I'm going to be towing a frame with a propane tank bolted to it.
Takes the "Made in America" thing to a whole new level.
The thing is put together with staples!
The cabinetry is literally put together with staples. The frame pieces don't even touch one another. They just cut them to within 1/4" and held them together with whopping great staples. The "frame" is then stapled to the 3/32" (plywood? particle board?) face pieces and the whole mess is attached to the floor with a couple of screws.
I crawled underneath it today to have a look at how the wiring and propane lines were run. It's a total nightmare. The wires are attached to the bottom of the floor decking with a few (3 total!) screw collars. The wires are just hanging under the frame rails - no chafe protection - no nothing. The "holes" where the wires pass through the decking into the trailer look like the decking was just smashed with a hammer until they made a hole. There's no grommet or anything. The wires just pass up through the ragged hole and then they closed it up with a pound of silicone sealant. Inside it's about the same - a birds nest, crimp connectors, and cover it all up with some simulated-wood-grain-paneling.
The propane has a central iron pipe (yup, Iron pipe under the trailer) running down the middle with fittings off of it that connect to copper tubing that runs through the decking to the appliances. One of the the copper tubes was thoughtful pre-crimped at the factory. There's no provision whatsoever to protect anything from stones kicked up by the tires.
There's much more to this tale of incompetence and stupidity but I can feel my blood pressure spiking so it's time to stop.
Bought it for a trip with the family across Newfoundland and Labrador. I think that by the time I get to the end of the Trans Labrador Highway, I'm going to be towing a frame with a propane tank bolted to it.
Takes the "Made in America" thing to a whole new level.
The thing is put together with staples!
The cabinetry is literally put together with staples. The frame pieces don't even touch one another. They just cut them to within 1/4" and held them together with whopping great staples. The "frame" is then stapled to the 3/32" (plywood? particle board?) face pieces and the whole mess is attached to the floor with a couple of screws.
I crawled underneath it today to have a look at how the wiring and propane lines were run. It's a total nightmare. The wires are attached to the bottom of the floor decking with a few (3 total!) screw collars. The wires are just hanging under the frame rails - no chafe protection - no nothing. The "holes" where the wires pass through the decking into the trailer look like the decking was just smashed with a hammer until they made a hole. There's no grommet or anything. The wires just pass up through the ragged hole and then they closed it up with a pound of silicone sealant. Inside it's about the same - a birds nest, crimp connectors, and cover it all up with some simulated-wood-grain-paneling.
The propane has a central iron pipe (yup, Iron pipe under the trailer) running down the middle with fittings off of it that connect to copper tubing that runs through the decking to the appliances. One of the the copper tubes was thoughtful pre-crimped at the factory. There's no provision whatsoever to protect anything from stones kicked up by the tires.
There's much more to this tale of incompetence and stupidity but I can feel my blood pressure spiking so it's time to stop.