FunnyCamper wrote:
what the heck are you people buying?
I had 5 campers. A Elkhorn truck camper, 2 Jayco campers, 1 Forest River camper and my current Heartland toyhauler.
I never had problems with any of these. minor stuff on delivery under warranty...but what monster problems are you people having out there????
Japanese RVs---heck no. geez.
I've enjoyed the good quality of all my campers I owned.
Everybody I've talked to has had to get little things fixed. Nothing that would be a deal breaker, but little things that could have been caught with just a little bit more care. Same thing in every new home I've done, somebody in almost every trade makes an oversight here and there, and it all has to be 'caught' before the customer gets there.
There are so many subsystems in a motorhome, and so many handwired circuits, problems seem to happen at many price points. I love every rv I've had, but had to fix them. Whereas the chassis' are more dependable, maybe because they've had so many standardized assembly operations with so much repetition. I'm thinking that the F53 chassis is just as good as a Toyota, in terms of reliability. I'll bet the Freightliners and others are, too.
I think the OP's post reflects the feeling that if there were a far sighted approach to quality (like Airstream, Prevost, etc) that it would mean less things breaking or not being made right in the first place. And the opposing argument is that we wouldn't pay for that level of quality. Well, honest competition usually rewards the marketplace with better products. An RV review organization based on factual statistics would be nice to refer to, at least for the buyers.
I wonder if there was a magazine or website, like consumer's reports, that reviewed quality control honestly, (without fear of losing ad dollars), that it would be possible to have instantaneous improvement in our domestic RV's, though?