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CrusinSusan's avatar
CrusinSusan
Explorer
Jul 12, 2013

Pre-Purchase Check List (Roadtrek Specific?) & Gobbly-Gook

Maybe tiredness is scrambling my brain, but surely there is a pre-purchase checklist on here somewhere (and I'm asking in the B forum because I'm hoping someone has a Roadtrek specific list they could direct me to).

FWIW, I'm looking at a 1999 Roadtrek 190 Popular closing in on 100k miles. And here's some "incidentals" that have me concerned:

It's a consignment, and there was, I swear, a piece of black electrical tape over the illuminated check engine light, and, I might add, the airbag light (also illuminated). The dealer seemed as surprised as I about this. Remember, it's a consignment, and my gut is telling me he's an okay guy. But my gut has been known to be wrong before.

He took it to his auto shop, and they checked it, and it seemed it just needed resetting. So the light is no longer lit. However, the airbag light is still lit, and it'll cost to figure out what's wrong with it. They'd need some sort of physical financial assurance from me before they fiddle with it anymore.

Naturally, I'm taking it to my mechanic (whom I am ever so grateful to have found for his thoroughness and reasonableness; been a long time since I've been able to trust a mechanic) before I hand over money. Actually, the dealer should have dropped it off there today (but I haven't heard back yet about that).

There's some other things too, like the genny (1780 hrs) sputtering down to off in 5-10 minutes (I tested it), which could just be the filter, but could be something bigger too. Missing cushions (preventing the twins being made into a king..no biggie, but still, you know)

Sorry, I digress. SPECIFICALLY, I'd like a mechanic check list (to just hand over to my fabulous mechanic), and a list of RV stuff to check that I'll do mostly myself.

Again, I'm feeling pretty good in my gut about the dealer (I'm working with the owner), but I can't find squat about him online (small operation, mostly trailers); don't even know how long he's been in business; and frankly, his partner (employee??), I don't like at all.

Hmm. After writing this, I guess I'm asking for the 2 checklists and some thoughts about my gut (usually a good machine to follow) and the facts (the black tape over the engine light). Hard thing (weird actually) when the gut says the dealer's okay (kinda a first for me, really), and there's black tape over the engine light (even if it is a consign....crud, better add to the list: "ask dealer what the owner's reason was for black tape"....duh!)

Should throw in here that they're offering NADA clean trade price on my car (through a neighboring car dealer; they don't take cars directly), which is fair. And that the owner-dealer is being respectful, not pushy, not unreasonable, taking all the steps one would expect (cleaning rig up, mechanically checking, etc) and going with the NADA price on the rig too (an unusual move in the "B" world IMO).

Oh heck, I dunno. What say you all?
  • Hey there mum! Well, not much happening there now, but there may be soon! ;)

    2011 LTV Libero, eh? Will check it out.
  • Hey Ms CruisinSusan... long time no see. :C I'm off to read your blog and catch up with what's been happening in your life.
  • The dealer will not know how well the RV is maintained. Based on your comments I don't think you are comfortable with the RV and I would trust your instincts. There will always be another RV available to buy, take your time.
  • I agree with the carfax/autocheck reports, but still feel negligent without one; got it anyway.

    Re: the genny; ya, I'm not too hopeful about it, but the math works out to 10 hrs a month of running it, which isn't outrageous. And frankly, I'd expect any "stock" genny nearly a decade and a half old to have problems, regardless of the hours. I may have to just suck that up. I dunno. My real concern is the vehicle itself; genny is just icing on the cake really. (Can't believe I just sold my honda...yeesh)
  • Those computerized vehicle history lists aren't very valuable, many times only real serious stuff is entered such as major collision or whatever, I understand that mechanics aren't required to enter work they perform in to the data base. And over 1,000 hours on a generator is a lot, didn't know they would last that long! The comments above on consignment sales are pretty accurate, I'd be wary of dealing on this vehicle. Keep your eyes open, a good buy on a good unit will come along probably at the end of camping season.
  • Pin number? You mean VIN, yes? Did that, doing the check, but I haven't been impressed with carfax.

    Good call on the maintenance records; that's going on my list.

    As far as responsibility goes, all used vehicles are sold as is, whether by a dealer or individual; so once it's sold, only the new owner is responsible.

    Consignment happens when a person doesn't want to be bothered with selling their rig (advertising, etc), and aren't in the market for a new one (thus, it won't be a trade-in). It's a perfectly valid way of selling off an unwanted vehicle; though I suspect you're right - that the owner just wanted it gone.
  • my "gut" says somebody wasnt interested or didnt have the money to take care of the RV. A "consignment"? Is this some way to sell used without having any responsibility for it? I would insist on knowing who the owner is, see the maintenance records, know where the maintenance was done, or, require the same guarantee used car businesses provide. At least get the pin number and do a carfax on it.