Forum Discussion
pnichols
Jul 20, 2014Explorer II
I've never had a slide RV and never will, so I will never know "from luckout experinece" how reliable they can be. Just looking at them made me wonder about the reliability compromises they must be introducing not only with regards to getting stuck or leaking ... but in the structural weakness they must be introducing into the RV's internal framing - especially sidewall shear strength.
There is one "law of the universe" that quality construction and no amount of engineering/design dollars can trump: Increased complexity will ALWAYS reduce long term reliability. One cannot get around it.
We absolutely want minimum potential for problems on our RV travels, as we're out there for enjoyment that as much as possible is not based on wishing and hoping we'll luck out with regards to equipment failure. Keeping it simple is the best way. ;)
There is one "law of the universe" that quality construction and no amount of engineering/design dollars can trump: Increased complexity will ALWAYS reduce long term reliability. One cannot get around it.
We absolutely want minimum potential for problems on our RV travels, as we're out there for enjoyment that as much as possible is not based on wishing and hoping we'll luck out with regards to equipment failure. Keeping it simple is the best way. ;)
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