Jul-08-2015 12:12 PM
Aug-06-2015 07:33 AM
richfaa wrote:
We did a complete and in depth PDI with our dealer who was excellent. It actually took two days at over 3 hours per day. It rolled out of the dealers lot with all problems corrected , everything working.
4 months and @ 4K miles later it burst into flames in Quartsite due to a electrical wire and a hydraulic line rubbing against the frame. It was in the underbelly were we could not see it. Poor workmanship, no quality control.It is the thing you can not see that will get you.
Aug-06-2015 06:43 AM
Aug-06-2015 06:34 AM
Lantley wrote:laknox wrote:ChopperBill wrote:Lantley wrote:
We love to rant and complain but If we took the time to inspect our RV's top to bottom before pulling off the lot 95% of the issues would be found and corrected on day 1.
A new house requires a punch list to make it 100% right an RV does as well.
Being the DIY type helps as well but if your DIY skills are lacking. It becomes more important to do a thorough PDI.
Yeah, well when we went to pick up our new prior fifth wheel the guy that was suppose to do the pdi was sick so we did it ourselves. Took a 2-3 hours. Asked how the keyless pad worked to change numbers. No one knew. Asked how to take off quick attach TV. No one knew. A TV connection wasn't working. They said they would have to take pictures and send then in to get warranty approval! Fixed it myself. Took it home and brakes weren't correct. Took it back to dealer. Said two weeks out! Called in two weeks and they said its fixed. Pick up, no brakes! Heck with them took it to an independent dealer. Cost me $100 to clean all the grease out of the brakes! NMever took it back for warranty work. Fixed a few things my self. . And that wasn't the first dealer to pull that krap. Guess I'm one of those 5%
Personally, Bill, I wouldn't have signed off on it. They want paid, they get it fixed first. (shrug)
Lyle
I agree with Lyle you should have refused delivery. What's the point of the PDI if you are going to accept the RV anyway?
Aug-05-2015 09:56 PM
Aug-05-2015 08:57 AM
laknox wrote:ChopperBill wrote:Lantley wrote:
We love to rant and complain but If we took the time to inspect our RV's top to bottom before pulling off the lot 95% of the issues would be found and corrected on day 1.
A new house requires a punch list to make it 100% right an RV does as well.
Being the DIY type helps as well but if your DIY skills are lacking. It becomes more important to do a thorough PDI.
Yeah, well when we went to pick up our new prior fifth wheel the guy that was suppose to do the pdi was sick so we did it ourselves. Took a 2-3 hours. Asked how the keyless pad worked to change numbers. No one knew. Asked how to take off quick attach TV. No one knew. A TV connection wasn't working. They said they would have to take pictures and send then in to get warranty approval! Fixed it myself. Took it home and brakes weren't correct. Took it back to dealer. Said two weeks out! Called in two weeks and they said its fixed. Pick up, no brakes! Heck with them took it to an independent dealer. Cost me $100 to clean all the grease out of the brakes! Never took it back for warranty work. Fixed a few things my self. . And that wasn't the first dealer to pull that krap. Guess I'm one of those 5%
Personally, Bill, I wouldn't have signed off on it. They want paid, they get it fixed first. (shrug)
Lyle
Aug-05-2015 07:51 AM
ChopperBill wrote:Lantley wrote:
We love to rant and complain but If we took the time to inspect our RV's top to bottom before pulling off the lot 95% of the issues would be found and corrected on day 1.
A new house requires a punch list to make it 100% right an RV does as well.
Being the DIY type helps as well but if your DIY skills are lacking. It becomes more important to do a thorough PDI.
Yeah, well when we went to pick up our new prior fifth wheel the guy that was suppose to do the pdi was sick so we did it ourselves. Took a 2-3 hours. Asked how the keyless pad worked to change numbers. No one knew. Asked how to take off quick attach TV. No one knew. A TV connection wasn't working. They said they would have to take pictures and send then in to get warranty approval! Fixed it myself. Took it home and brakes weren't correct. Took it back to dealer. Said two weeks out! Called in two weeks and they said its fixed. Pick up, no brakes! Heck with them took it to an independent dealer. Cost me $100 to clean all the grease out of the brakes! Never took it back for warranty work. Fixed a few things my self. . And that wasn't the first dealer to pull that krap. Guess I'm one of those 5%
Aug-05-2015 07:08 AM
Lantley wrote:
We love to rant and complain but If we took the time to inspect our RV's top to bottom before pulling off the lot 95% of the issues would be found and corrected on day 1.
A new house requires a punch list to make it 100% right an RV does as well.
Being the DIY type helps as well but if your DIY skills are lacking. It becomes more important to do a thorough PDI.
Aug-05-2015 04:30 AM
Aug-04-2015 07:30 PM
Aug-04-2015 03:39 PM
Aug-04-2015 03:15 PM
Lantley wrote:
We love to rant and complain but If we took the time to inspect our RV's top to bottom before pulling off the lot 95% of the issues would be found and corrected on day 1.
A new house requires a punch list to make it 100% right an RV does as well.
Being the DIY type helps as well but if your DIY skills are lacking. It becomes more important to do a thorough PDI.
Aug-04-2015 09:42 AM
Me Again wrote:
The sad thing is when outfits like NuWa that built quality Hitchhiker trailers not enough people were willing to pay for the quality and they did not make it! So who is really to blame? The manufacturers or the "WallyWorld" American buyers. We are surrounded by sub-par products, but fail to purchase our way out of it. Couple that with corporate greed and we are doomed in the long run. Some of us are old enough to remember "Union Made" labels and what that meant!
Chris
Aug-04-2015 09:26 AM
Aug-04-2015 09:16 AM
HighSpeedAluminum wrote:
FWIW. I bought our Grand Design in April. We have been out for three weeks traveling, and so far just a broken TV. I asked her if I could upgrade the TV instead of replacing it. They said sure. I installed it and sent them the receipt. The "check is in the mail for the TV." I noticed the doorstops in the bathroom shower were installed backwards allowing the doors to move quite bit when driving down the road. Was advised about this problem by another grand design owner who said they had the same problem only that they found out the hard way when their's broke. It was a simple remove two screws and put them back in; With the parts installed the correct way. The brakes did not work at all on a trailer that weighs up to 14,000 pounds so I jacked up the trailer and adjusted the brakes. It took a lot of tightening on the brakes to get them adjusted properly. The dealer obviously did not service the trailer before they handed me the keys. Only minor problems for me so far. Hopefully it stays that way!