mist4life wrote:
This is my first post and I hope you all will take mercy and help me out. My mother-in-law has gifted us with her 2000 Bounder 34D. This is very generous and we are foolishly excited. The kicker to this is that it has set in a campground unmoved for 7 years since my father-in-laws passing. We know we need all new tires, a new fuel pump and plan on replacing the serpentine belts fearing dry rot. Please let know what other things we need to take care before trying to get it from Indiana to our Ohio home. Our plan is to gut and remodel the inside and make it our home on the road. We know that we are in for a long road and may have to spend $$ but are thinking because of no initial money layout we are still ahead. Any thoughts and suggestions will be appreciated! Thanks!
I see motorhomes and travel trailers all the time on Craigslist, "gutted out and ready for you to build it the way you want it" or "stripped this out and planned on remaking it how I wanted but I found one I like..."
What statements like these translate to is.....
"I never realized you needed to understand electricity and codes, both 120v AC and 12v DC, that you needed a full cabinet making shop and the knowledge to plan and execute construction of cabinets, tables, etc, totally understand RV appliances and systems, and that you needed to be a mechanic of the highest order to fix all of the little issues and big ones to make this reliable and roadworthy"I watched a sailboat video on Youtube where the couple got lucky and were the first to answer a Craigslist ad for a free sailboat that really was in very good condition. In their reviewing of it they admitted that they had a sailboat and they had gutted it and were working to re-do the interior completely but discovered their mistake and were not going down that road again. Their plan this time was to do some light redecorating and minor repairs and actually get to USE the boat rather than working on it for years and years.
The very best thing you can do is (provided the MH hasn't been severely water damaged, or rodent damaged beyond reasonable repairs) is to do a super deep cleaning, washing curtains and removable cushion covers, etc, replacing the mattress, doing mechanical repairs to make the chassis and house functional again, and using it. Only after you use it for a while and really know how RV's work and understand them, should you consider "remodeling" certain individual items, one at a time, making sure that you can get it back together within a reasonable amount of time.
As others and yourself have already noted, the MH will need lots of mechanical work, such as all new brake calipers, rotors, pads, hoses, master cylinder, fuel pump and filters (I'll bet it has a plastic tank), fuel hoses, coolant, coolant hoses, and belts, probably a new water pump, and dump and refill of the transmission and engine oils and filters, etc. Wheel bearings will be a huge item as you have a set of bearings on each of the rear hubs and they could also be bad. You will probably have to engage the services of a truck shop to handle this, as special sockets will be required on the rear to remove and replace/retorque the rear bearings.
Hope it all works out for you, it will be a lot of work, but don't make more work for yourself than it needs to be.
Charles