Forum Discussion

John_S2's avatar
John_S2
Explorer
Oct 19, 2013

Looking at some Airstreams

Wondering what percentage off on MSRP is typical for this kind of trailer? Looking at something like a 25' 2013 flying cloud model.

Or is it best to buy used?

28 Replies

  • Community Alumni's avatar
    Community Alumni
    I'd like to know what family car or SUV can easily pull most Airstreams.
  • I would look at used first, thats what I am doing but then I am looking for a 34 foot tripple axle model and Airstream no longer makes them.
    There is no argument that Airstreams will tow better and last longer but the Harley analogy is spot on IMHO in terms of lifestyle and ya either love them or hate them.
    Clearly they are not for everybody, While I do love my slide I would give it up for a 34ft silver twinky.
  • We have been the happy owners of three Airstreams. We first bought a 25ft. It was new. I wish we had not sold it. If not we would have saved tons of dollars. Later on after several other types of RVs we bought a used 19ft CCD Bambi. Nice TT but just a tad small for two. Currently we own a 23ft 2009 Flying Cloud. It is just what we want. We can get into almost any parking spot and easy to tow with a 1/2 ton. You couldn't give me a slide. Too many issues to deal with. Too many variables to discuss amount off on MSRP.

    But to each his own.
  • Wow, Slowmover, tell us what you really think, lol.

    Airstreams are a good fit for some. If I was buying one (might just have that in mind, BTW), I'd look at the used ones, first. Since they have a good bit of longevity, buying used is not such a risk as others. I have no idea what a new 25' Flying Cloud retails at. As was mentioned, the Airforum guys will let you know quickly.
  • jmtandem wrote:
    IMHO it's not so much what kind of a deal did I get but more how good the rig fits our camping lifestyle after a few times out. If it doesn't fit no deal is a good deal.


    This is an excellent point and the previous suggestion to go to Airforums is also solid advice. Airstreams are a lot like Harley Davidsons. They might be in the motorcycle family but in many ways they are a lifestyle. Airstreams are very similar as they are more about a lifestyle than an RV. If you are comfortable in that lifestyle there is probably nothing else in the RV world that will satisfy. If not, the Airstream will likely not work that well for you. MSRP is a secondary consideration.


    Really, . . . on this planet? "Lifestyle" is itself one of those bogus marketing terms folks "think" has vailidity? Care to define it? And then how it is supposed to apply?

    An Airstream -- like its' upmarket cousins now gone (Avion, Silver Streak and Streamline) -- was designed to be pulled by the family car. And last for a generation or more, not just a few years. A higher initial cost, yes, but a long-term lower cost in operation and ownership.

    Quality has its' price. So for those who'd rather not throw away money on a disposable travel trailer but buy one when the children are small and be used until one is literally too old to travel by car anymore, an all-aluminum, aerodynamic trailer with fully independent suspension is a fairly easy choice.

    For those for whom a trailer, any RV, will be used just a few years (and toss away tens of thousands in some instances) any brand of plastic white box with terrible road performance and high horsepower demand will apparently satisfy.

    Don't get too far out with the H-D motorcycle analogy. A technically inferior bike. All sizzle and no steak. Obsolete. A genuine waste of money except for the criminal cachet which attachs to it. T-shirts, tattoos and felonies . . something to which to aspire?

    Americans don't individually take home as much of GNP as they once did. And a travel trailer , the upmarket versions, that once cost as much as the average American house, no longer have the market they did in the RV golden era of the 1960's. Women going to work fulltime and less time off for families, etc, changed the market. Not just that fuel that is no longer cheap. Plenty of demographic changes. For travelling continent-wide this was the TT to have before truck and airline "de-regulation" (read: profit confined to fewer hands).

    Airstream was also doomed before being bought to be the flagship of an RV conglomerate. Changes to keep costs down, yes, and no longer a leader in tech innovation. But there is no other leader. Nor is there any better TT to pull. With a tow vehicle that won't break the bank like a $1/mile pickup in daily, year-round use a family car or minivan can pull nearly any of them.

    As with any quality brand there are those for whom cool and shiny is enough. Planety of laughable pickups out there --lifted, bechromed and fitted with offroad tires that all together make it an even worse choice for towing than originally (already the least safe vehicle one could buy) -- so one might say that those who intentionally waste their families money buying one cheap trailer after another to be pulled by a too-expensive tow vehicle are the ones seduced by marketing. Lifestyle.

    .
  • IMHO it's not so much what kind of a deal did I get but more how good the rig fits our camping lifestyle after a few times out. If it doesn't fit no deal is a good deal.


    This is an excellent point and the previous suggestion to go to Airforums is also solid advice. Airstreams are a lot like Harley Davidsons. Harley's might be in the motorcycle family but in many ways they are a lifestyle. Airstreams are very similar as they are more about a lifestyle than an RV. Even the founder of Airstream, Wally Byam, stressed that Airstreams were designed and built for those that like to spend lots of time using it to travel extensively. They are not designed for the summer weekend and two weeks vacation RV user. If you are comfortable in that lifestyle Airstreams will work for you. Many Airstream owners would have nothing else. MSRP for me would be a secondary consideration.
  • IMHO it's not so much what kind of a deal did I get but more how good the rig fits our camping lifestyle after a few times out. If it doesn't fit no deal is a good deal.
  • With respect to everyone here, this question might be better asked at Airforums.com - - it is populated with well informed Airstream folks.

    Bill