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mabynack's avatar
mabynack
Explorer II
Jun 13, 2016

Trials and Tribulations

Ten years ago my wife and I decided to buy a fifth wheel and tow vehicle to travel to Alaska when we retired in 2018. We figured it would be paid off by the time we were ready to go. Boy was that a mistake.

We divorced about four years ago and I kept the truck and fifth wheel - along with the payments. I'm still working, so the fifth wheel sits unused for 50 weeks a year. I took it out for a week in January and the awning was dry rotted and the gray water tank split. I got that fixed and a new roof put on and I was going to use it last month and the slides wouldn't extend.

I went to hook it up to take it to the RV repair shop and the engine let go on the truck while it was idling. Apparently the injector stuck open, flooded the cylinder with fuel, and bent valves, pushrods and broke cam followers when it attempted to open the valves with fuel in cylinders.

I had a blown head gasket two years ago and spent $8000 getting the top end of the engine redone and "bulletproofed" and this repair ended up repeating most of those repairs. I had to put $7000 on my credit card, which means I won't be able to save as much for my Alaska trip.

In short - the RV and truck have been in the shop three times since the last time I actually used them. I can't seem to keep up with the repairs and I'm starting to have my doubts that it's going to make it to Alaska in two years. I can't afford to buy a new RV and/or truck and still be able to retire.

If I had waited to buy the RV, I probably wouldn't have purchased the Taj Mahal on wheels. It's nice, but pretty high maintenance. The same could be said for the ex.

I regret not putting the money I've been using for payments in a savings account and waiting to purchase the RV after I retired. Live and learn.
  • mabynack wrote:
    Ten years ago my wife and I decided to buy a fifth wheel and tow vehicle to travel to Alaska when we retired in 2018.


    You bought a 2006 RV and truck with the idea you would use it for a trip to Alaska in 2018, or 12 years later.

    With all due respect, I find that plan defies all logic.

    I hope it all works out for you.
  • Grit dog offered some very good advice. ;)

    RVs are high maintenance and can be a money pit. But they are enjoyable if a person has the finances.
  • Dude, that s uc k s.
    Moral of the story (I'll leave the ex wife part out), is Ford 6.0 diesels haven't gotten any better with age and lack of maintenance, upkeep and/or dry storage wreaks havoc on RVs.
    On the upside, you have a freshly re-bullet proofed F350? diesel with 8 (I hope) new injectors, which hopefully hasn't sat out in the weather for 10 years and a working 5th wheel now?
    My advice would be dump the 5ver unless you want to haul that pig around for just yourself to camp in. It's never going to be worth more later. Then when you're ready to take the trip, find a small, reasonable TT that has been well cared for and keep up with the maintenance on it.
    Again, sorry to hear about all this, but preventative maintenance is called "preventative" for a reason. Tough lesson that hopefully someone will learn from.
  • I'm sorry for your troubles
    I just spent $4600 on my engine

    But look at it this way, if you had put all that money in savings
    You would only have gotten 1/2 or less as the ex would have gotten her share
    Would the half of less, bought the 5th wheel and truck that you have?
  • My sister had the same plan except she moved into the RV at a local mobile home park. 10 years later she owns an RV that is really a mess. Try leaving your jacks down and your slides out for 10 years. In one position all this time, the sun has done a job on the paint on one side while leaving the other side alone. The heating system failed along with the air conditioners and everything else that either was never used or over used.

    Good luck with your repairs.
  • I hope it eventually works out for you.

    I knew another guy that did something similar. He bought a class A ten years before retirement with the idea that it would be paid for by the time he retired. What he discovered when he did retire, after almost never using it, was that he owned a ten year old MH that needed lots of repair due to age and lack of use.

    Stick with the dream, you will get there somehow.

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