Forum Discussion

jungleexplorer's avatar
Jul 15, 2017

Buyers complaining about Ultra-Lite floor. What to do?

I am trying to sale my Ultra-Lite and I am getting a lot of lookers, but everyone of them is turned off by the floor. They say it feels spongy, and it does, but that is the way it was from day one, because it is an ultra-lite. Some have even started bouncing up and down on it saying, "Look! See how spongy it is!" When I try to convince them that it just way ultra-lite are, they say that they believe that there is water damage. But there never has been a leak. I am getting tired of showing it to people that get turned away by the floor and there is nothing I can do about it.

What can I put in my add to weed out these people that want and concrete rock hard floor?

28 Replies

  • I know what your talking about. I bought a new ultralight in 2003 and it had the same issues from day one a sponge floor. I traded it in after one trip. Trading it in might be your best bet. The only other thing you can do is add more reinforcement to the floor supports. Either way you'll take a loss. You might get lucky with someone that has knowledge of foam core floors and be able to sell at a discount.
  • Gdetrailer wrote:
    Although, you could RAISE the asking price 50% then when someone pulls that stunt you could "discount" it by 25% and in the end get more for it :B

    Do you sell used cars and RV's for a living? :B :B
  • The average value of my RV is $6,547. I have it listed for $6,000 and am willing to go as low as $5,000. But once these people get in it and feel the floor, they don't want it at any price.
  • If they're all that way from day 1, just invite any lookers to visit a dealer and check out a new one, then come back for a good deal.
  • Gdetrailer wrote:
    jungleexplorer wrote:
    I am trying to sale my Ultra-Lite and I am getting a lot of lookers, but everyone of them is turned off by the floor. They say it feels spongy, and it does, but that is the way it was from day one, because it is an ultra-lite. Some have even started bouncing up and down on it saying, "Look! See how spongy it is!" When I try to convince them that it just way ultra-lite are, they say that they believe that there is water damage. But there never has been a leak. I am getting tired of showing it to people that get turned away by the floor and there is nothing I can do about it.

    What can I put in my add to weed out these people that want and concrete rock hard floor?


    Have you considered that there MAY BE water damage and you have gotten used to the extra spongy feel?

    Realistically it is a possibility.

    Have you considered that your RV may not be priced realistically (IE over priced)? Sometimes it is hard to price something you own to sell, perhaps a trip to your local RV dealer for an appraisal may be in order..

    Other than lowering the price (IE negotiate) there is not much you can do..

    Although, you could RAISE the asking price 50% then when someone pulls that stunt you could "discount" it by 25% and in the end get more for it :B
    It's not really a possibility. Those floors have very little wood in them. It's mostly foam, and it is a well known problem. If the little bit of wood there is in the floor was water damaged, you would fall right thru it.
  • jungleexplorer wrote:
    I am trying to sale my Ultra-Lite and I am getting a lot of lookers, but everyone of them is turned off by the floor. They say it feels spongy, and it does, but that is the way it was from day one, because it is an ultra-lite. Some have even started bouncing up and down on it saying, "Look! See how spongy it is!" When I try to convince them that it just way ultra-lite are, they say that they believe that there is water damage. But there never has been a leak. I am getting tired of showing it to people that get turned away by the floor and there is nothing I can do about it.

    What can I put in my add to weed out these people that want and concrete rock hard floor?


    Have you considered that there MAY BE water damage and you have gotten used to the extra spongy feel?

    Realistically it is a possibility.

    Have you considered that your RV may not be priced realistically (IE over priced)? Sometimes it is hard to price something you own to sell, perhaps a trip to your local RV dealer for an appraisal may be in order..

    Other than lowering the price (IE negotiate) there is not much you can do..

    Although, you could RAISE the asking price 50% then when someone pulls that stunt you could "discount" it by 25% and in the end get more for it :B
  • Identical to what happened to my son with his 2008 Rockwood ultra light. People rightfully so instantly think water damage as they well should. It's an RV!!!!!

    His started in front of the sink area and spread to toward the door which is the main travel path of course. He started out around $8500 iirc which I figured was top dollar. As he got tired of showing it to people he kept dropping the price. After a month or so he ended up getting $5800 from a guy who was going to live in it and needed one NOW.

    He had one guy interested around $7200 but his wife wouldn't go for it and was stuck on water damage. The guy who bought it had his mother with him and she had snowbird experience so she understood what we were telling her. It's from the foam sandwich deteriorating not water. My son wanted to buy a FW so we were busy looking but 90% of what we looked at WAS water damaged. I didn't have time to try to fix it.

    Sorry I cant offer much but good luck to you. Maybe you can say that it has a soft floor from foam deterioration and for people to search the issue on the web. It socks but just keep dropping the price or wait for the person who will deal with it. Everything sells, it's just a matter of price.