dougrainer wrote:
The OP is in Florida. This is a bad area to utilize an Alfa unit in heat. Alfa units(motorhomes) could NOT cool the interior below 80 degrees in temps above 90 degrees.
That is a good point. It's not uncommon for owners to install a roof air unit in the living room, and if this unit was used as an office in Florida, it might have that.
I'll also point out that part of the problem with cooling an Alfa has to do with the enormous windows, which let in tons of heat when the sun is shining on them. It's an acceptable trade-off for people who prize that openness (along with the high ceilings), but might not be noticeable (and therefore of value) to people renting an RV.
The basement air has two compressors, and with only one running, there's not much cooling at all. You can run both compressors on 30 amp power, but you have to know what you're doing (you can't just turn individual roof air units on and off), and I'm certain that would be beyond the skills of your average renter.
Also, the Gold model has more complex systems than the See Ya model, which as others have pointed out is not good for a rental. And Alfa used a unique (and terrible) split house/inverter battery bank system that causes owners untold grief until they really get their heads around it, or rewire it to be just one bank for the house and inverter batteries. This is not a rental-friendly situation.
The roofs on Alfas are really high because of the basement air, so it can be challenging to maneuver under trees and the like, and if you scrape, you're more likely to scrape actual roof than the tops of air conditioner units.
As for the slide failures, those were fixed by changing out to a center-drive system by owners, and Alfa started installing the center-drive system on new units in about 2005, so this unit might already have one from the factory, or the previous owner might have done the retrofit.